What is it about?

This article explores the performative politics of devotional soundscapes at Coptic Christian mūlid festivals. Echoing the State’s reformist efforts in the 1990s to transform Muslim saint festivals into utilitarian spaces and their goers into “modern” Egyptian citizens, today the Coptic Church works to similarly refashion these popular festivals grounds from places of debauchery into morally productive spaces. Aided by affluent Cairene based volunteers, church choirs travel from Cairo’s poshest neighborhoods to these festivals to actively sing, disseminate, and teach popular religious songs, taratīl, in an effort to develop poorer Christian pilgrims into modern, pious, and more audible “citizens of heaven.” Through the analysis of one church choir’s taratīl ministry at the mūlid, I illustrate how middle-class spiritual volunteers disrupt, and at times, reinscribe the Coptic Church’s disciplinary efforts on the festival’s poorer pilgrims, particularly as they look to modernize popular festivity into grounds of Christian ethical transformation.

Featured Image

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: SINGING HEAVEN ON EARTH: COPTIC COUNTERPUBLICS AND POPULAR SONG AT EGYPTIAN MŪLID FESTIVALS, International Journal of Middle East Studies, July 2017, Cambridge University Press,
DOI: 10.1017/s0020743817000290.
You can read the full text:

Read

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page