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Noticing Musical Becomings: Deleuzian and Guattarian Approaches to Ethnographic Studies of Musicking

Hanna Väätäinen; Milla Tiainen; Taru Leppänen; Pirkko Moisala

Noticing Musical Becomings: Deleuzian and Guattarian Approaches to Ethnographic Studies of Musicking

Hanna Väätäinen
Milla Tiainen
Taru Leppänen
Pirkko Moisala
Katso/Avaa
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Columbia University
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042716428
Tiivistelmä

In this article, we expand conceptually upon approaches in cultural
musicology and ethnomusicology that conceive of music in terms of
shifting textual signs and performances of cultural meaning.1
Our aim is to propose some new ways of considering music in terms of
relational events, doing, and becoming. We ask: what if music does more
than symbolically mediate and represent worlds? What if music constantly
comes into being and does things as part of intrinsically messy
realities that consist of relations between a variety of processes and
things: vibrations, sounds, sensations and feelings, human bodies and
minds, non–human entities, words and meanings, spaces, movements and
materialities, (re)arrangements of social organization and power, and
more? How might our conceptions of music, on the one hand, and our
methodological stances, on the other, reconfigure if we harness this
kind of relational and inherently heterogeneous occurring as a starting
point?


Our questions are inspired by the process thinking of French
philosophers Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari and by the work of
latter–day theorists who develop this thinking, such as Rosi Braidotti,
Claire Colebrook, Rebecca Coleman, Elizabeth Grosz, and Brian Massumi.
Deleuze and Guattari’s work can be regarded as an effort to contest
transcendent ways of thinking. Deleuze and Guattari pursue this aim by
aspiring to an ontology that is not grounded upon being but upon the
processuality or primary dynamism of reality. In his early sole–authored
work Difference and Repetition, Deleuze equates being with becoming by
stating that identities only emerge from repetition as difference:
“Returning is thus the only identity . . . ; the identity of difference,
the identical which belongs to the different, or turns around the
different” (1994, 41). This to say that things—whether human subjects,
philosophical ideas, or musical formations—are not founded on an
essence. Their being, or identity, consists in their processual, and
thereby inevitably varying, situationally actualizing, open–ended
existence. Being is the effect of (the return of) difference rather than
difference being the effect of being (see, for e.g., Deleuze 1994, 41,
55). The order between being and becoming gets overturned. Better put,
the category of being loses explanatory power and dissolves into
becoming. It is, indeed, becoming that will figure and be elaborated as
the guiding concept of our theoretical reflections in this article,
illuminated by examples drawn from our recent ethnographic work.


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  • Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]

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