Between Estrangement at Home and Marginalization by the Host: Tracing Senses of Belonging through Music †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. “Refugee Crisis” “on the Doorstep of Europe”
Being In-Limbo: Being Otherized by the ‘Host’ and Estranged from ‘Home’
3. Home Reverberations: Where Does It Sound Home?
3.1. Vignette1-Hearing and Encountering at the City Centre of Athens
‘Here I heard bouzouki, Greek music, for the first time, and I decided that I’m going to stay in Greece. My friends, we were five then-all of them left for other countries-, were asking me if I’m crazy, because I spoke English and I could go anywhere I wanted along with them. But I decided to stay here because of music … When I talked with my aunt -she lives in another European country-she told me “Greece is like Iran before Revolution. You will not find such music anywhere else. You’d better stay there if you want this …”’8
3.2. Vignette 2-(Pop) Music Circulations, Boundary-Blending and Alternative Belongings
4. Homemaking at Host: Performing Belongings
‘… you can show your feeling with your music. It is the feeling that [music] shares between the people, and feeling is the same. Maybe the language is not the same, but the feeling is the same. So, we can show our feeling with the music. For example, in my country there is war. When I make a song, for sure it’s sad. Maybe you don’t understand the text at all, but you feel that it is a sad song from the melody…’15
5. Musicking Border-Making and Border-Crossing: Musical Encounters Blending and Challenging a Bounded Order
6. Concluding Remarks
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | For an extensive discussion of the means and tools, that ethnographic research employs and the holistic scope it assumes, you may refer to Eriksen’s work (Eriksen 2010). |
2 | For an extensive discussion over autoethnography as method you may refer to Reed-Danahay (1997), Wall (2006), and Ellis et al. (2011). |
3 | To ensure my interviewees’ anonymity and considering their specific requests, pseudonyms are employed and any details that could compromise their anonymity are omitted. |
4 | In official and vernacular discourses the terms refugees/migrants have largely been used interchangeably, despite the fundamental differences in the connotations that each term has. While the definition and subsequent rights of a ‘refugee’ are determined by international conventions and agreements stemming from the UN 1951 Convention, and while ‘immigration policies’ regulate all non-nationals’ movements towards a state, the term ‘migrant’ has no legal basis, despite being used as an umbrella-term for all people on the move (IOM 2019, p. 132). Consequently, the choice of either term (refugees/migrants) has implicit and/or explicit implications for refugees regarding the acknowledgement of the human experience and the relevant legal consequences (attribution of status, benefits, and so on), and it further suggests the scope of the ones choosing either term. |
5 | The 2016 EU-Turkey Agreement, notoriously known as ‘the Deal,’ was signed allegedly for the purpose of fighting ‘irregular migration,’ and for the protection of the most vulnerable. However, the Agreement has been heavily criticized on the exclusionary logics that underpinned it, and recent research has confirmed that the most severely affected are refugees themselves (Gabrielsen-Jumbert and Tank 2019). According to this Agreement, for every Syrian returned from the Greek islands to Turkey, one Syrian would be relocated from Turkey to the EU, on the basis of the UN Vulnerability Criteria (EU 2016, online). |
6 | |
7 | For an overview of ‘hospitality’ in Greece, and its entanglements with refugees you may refer to Kyriakidou (2020). |
8 | Interview on 11 January 2020 and informal discussion on 1 February 2020, Athens. |
9 | |
10 | All interviewees who had lived and learnt music in Iran expressed familiarity with European Art music, as essentialized in piano and/or guitar accompaniment of Persian poetry. Considering that poetry is a cornerstone of Iranian culture (see Bastani 2020, chp. 2), European Art music’s value could easily be seen, according to my interviewees, in its inextricable interrelation to accompanying Iranian poetry. |
11 | For a comprehensive discussion of ‘Mode’ as a relationship of intervals suggesting scale and melody type, see Powers et al. (2001). |
12 | Informal discussion at Javanmard’s music lesson, 15 July 2020, Athens. |
13 | |
14 | Interview on 9 March 2020, Athens. |
15 | Interview on 30 September 2019, Athens. |
16 | Interview on 19 June 2020, Athens. |
17 | Interview on 30 September 2019, Athens. |
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Kyratsou, C. Between Estrangement at Home and Marginalization by the Host: Tracing Senses of Belonging through Music. Arts 2023, 12, 121. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts12030121
Kyratsou C. Between Estrangement at Home and Marginalization by the Host: Tracing Senses of Belonging through Music. Arts. 2023; 12(3):121. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts12030121
Chicago/Turabian StyleKyratsou, Chrysi. 2023. "Between Estrangement at Home and Marginalization by the Host: Tracing Senses of Belonging through Music" Arts 12, no. 3: 121. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts12030121
APA StyleKyratsou, C. (2023). Between Estrangement at Home and Marginalization by the Host: Tracing Senses of Belonging through Music. Arts, 12(3), 121. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts12030121