Phonographic Paleontology: Excavating the Sounds of Georgian Nationality, 1935

Oct
10
4:00 pm to 5:30 pm
Event Status
As Scheduled
Presenter
Brian Fairley (UCIS/REEES Postdoctoral Fellow)

This paper deals broadly with a history of music, technology, and changing ideas of race and ethnicity in the twentieth century. It focuses on Leningrad, where researchers in 1935 at the Institute of Anthropology, Archaeology, and Ethnography conducted recording experiments involving Georgian folk singers. Using the work of Maxim Gorky, Romain Rolland, and the hugely inflectional linguist Nikolai Marr, it shows how Georgian music inspired and challenged leading theories of language, nationality, and cultural evolution at a pivotal moment in Soviet history. Part of the Socialist Studies Seminar series.

In-Person event
Location
Baker Hall 246A, Carnegie Mellon University
Event Type
Seminar
Contact Email
alissaklots@pitt.edu
Event Topic
Soviet Georgian cultural history
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