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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Writers in Arabic and Persian have used notions of impression\,
  effect\, or influence\, ta’sīr\, to express how qualities of human charac
 ter correspond to the sounds of music and poetry\, and argued that the lat
 ter can actually shape the former.&nbsp\; Focusing on the tradition of sin
 ging in the region of Darvoz—literally the gateway to the mountainous hist
 orical region known as Badakhshan in Tajikistan and Afghanistan—Richard Wo
 lf will make two points:&nbsp\; 1) the relation of “presence” to “impressi
 on” is concretized through different forms of musical transmission\, and 2
 ) texts are seen to impress themselves on listeners by particular musical 
 means.For more information\, please contact Emera Louise Bridger at elbrid
 ge@syr.edu. Co-sponsored by the Department of Art and Music Histories and 
 Central Asia and the Caucasus Research Group
DTEND:20190416T175000Z
DTSTAMP:20260611T141001Z
DTSTART:20190416T163000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Impression and Presence in Badakhshan and Beyond
UID:RFCALITEM639167694011609394
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Writers in Arabic and Persian have used not
 ions of impression\, effect\, or influence\, ta’sīr\, to express how quali
 ties of human character correspond to the sounds of music and poetry\, and
  argued that the latter can actually shape the former.&nbsp\; Focusing on 
 the tradition of singing in the region of Darvoz—literally the gateway to 
 the mountainous historical region known as Badakhshan in Tajikistan and Af
 ghanistan—Richard Wolf will make two points:&nbsp\; 1) the relation of “pr
 esence” to “impression” is concretized through different forms of musical 
 transmission\, and 2) texts are seen to impress themselves on listeners by
  particular musical means.<br><strong><em>For more information\, please co
 ntact Emera Louise Bridger at <a href="mailto: elbridge@syr.edu" title="el
 bridge@syr.edu">elbridge@syr.edu</a>. Co-sponsored by the Department of Ar
 t and Music Histories and Central Asia and the Caucasus Research Group</em
 ></strong></p>
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