How Islam Survived in Sound: Musical Continuities in Central Asia
Ringvorlesung Turkologie Sommersemester 2026
Campus of the University of Vienna, Institute's Auditorium
Spitalgasse 2, Hof 4.1, 1090 Wien
Ringvorlesung Turkologie Sommersemester 2026
Spitalgasse 2, Hof 4.1, 1090 Wien
Beschreibung
This lecture series explores musical cultures across the Ottoman Empire, the Republic of Turkey, Iran, and Central Asia, examining these regions as interconnected soundscapes shaped by mobility, devotional practices, and political transformations. Drawing on current work in ethnomusicology, sound studies, and historical musicology, the series highlights diverse traditions, ranging from Islamic recitation and liturgy to Armenian liturgical and choral music, shared Turkish–Armenia folk repertoires, and the courtly, urban, and Sufi musical cultures of the Turko-Iranian world. Further contributions address the historical and contemporary study of Ottoman music (including recent advances in the Corpus Musicae Ottomanicae), the musical traditions of Badakhshan and northern Afghanistan, Central Asian art music such as Shashmaqam, and modern genres from popular music to heavy metal in Turkey. The program also includes perspectives on musical life in Qajar and Pahlavi Iran.
Complementing the lectures, the series will feature a concert offering direct engagement with selected repertoires.
For further information see: orientalistik.univie.ac.at/fachrichtungen/turkologie/veranstaltungen/ringvorlesung-turkologie/
Zur Webseite der Veranstaltung
Veranstalter
Department of Near Eastern Studies
Kontakt
Univ.-Prof. Mag. Dr. Yavuz Köse
Department of Near Eastern Studies
+431427743430
yavuz.koese(at)univie.ac.at
Erstellt am Mittwoch, 25. Februar 2026, 09:48
Letzte Änderung am Donnerstag, 05. März 2026, 10:02