Syria’s Fraught Balance: Movement, Politics, and Dabke Performance
With Shayna Silverstein, followed by a conversation with Deena Chalabi
Wednesday, February 19, 2020 | 5:00-7:00pm
Dwinelle Annex, Room 126, UC Berkeley
Co-sponsored by Arts Research Center, the Music Department, the Center for Middle Eastern Studies, and the Theater, Dance, and Performance Studies Department
Within the deep pessimism of the Syrian conflict remain moments of joyful action – performances of collectivity, commitment, and unity, however fleeting. Silverstein explored this tension through the ethos of movement – ḥarake in Syrian Arabic – as a marker of semantic, embodied, and political domains. Through an analysis of how embodied tactics negotiate power and space in authoritarian and repressive regimes, Silverstein focused on the popular dance music practice known as dabke.