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Winner of The de la Torre Bueno First Book Prize® (2025) from Dance Studies Association
Winner of the Dance, Movement, and Gesture Kealiinohomoku Award, granted by SEM (Society for Ethnomusicology)
Winner of the 2025 AMEWS Book Award, presented by the Association for Middle East Women's Studies
Honorable mention for ICTMD Book Prize, granted by the International Council for Traditions of Music and Dance
Honorable mention for Ruth Stone Prize, granted by SEM (Society for Ethnomusicology)
Dabke, one of Syria's most beloved dance music traditions, is at the center of the
…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Winner of The de la Torre Bueno First Book Prize® (2025) from Dance Studies Association

Winner of the Dance, Movement, and Gesture Kealiinohomoku Award, granted by SEM (Society for Ethnomusicology)

Winner of the 2025 AMEWS Book Award, presented by the Association for Middle East Women's Studies

Honorable mention for ICTMD Book Prize,
granted by the International Council for Traditions of Music and Dance

Honorable mention for Ruth Stone Prize, granted by SEM (Society for Ethnomusicology)


Dabke, one of Syria's most beloved dance music traditions, is at the center of the country's war and the social tensions that preceded conflict. Drawing on almost two decades of ethnographic, archival, and digital research, Shayna M. Silverstein shows how dabke dance music embodies the fraught dynamics of gender, class, ethnicity, and nationhood in an authoritarian state. The book situates dabke politically, economically, and historically in a broader account of expressive culture in Syria's recent (and ongoing) turmoil. Silverstein shows how people imagine the Syrian nation through dabke, how the state has coopted it, how performances of masculinity reveal-and play with-the tensions and complexities of the broader social imaginary, how forces opposed to the state have used it resistively, and how migrants and refugees have reimagined it in their new homes in Europe and the United States. She offers deeply thoughtful reflections on the ethnographer's ethical and political dilemmas on fieldwork in an authoritarian state. Silverstein's study ultimately questions the limits of authoritarian power, considering the pleasure and play intrinsic to dabke circles as evidence for how performance cultures sustain social life and solidify group bonds while reproducing the societal divides endemic to Syrian authoritarianism.


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Autorenporträt
SHAYNA M. SILVERSTEIN (Evanston, IL) is associate professor in the Department of Performance Studies at Northwestern University.