TY - JOUR
T1 - Listening as an Affective Practice: Affective Economies and Affective Orientations at Live Performances of Hindustani Music
AU - Alaghband-Zadeh, Chloe
PY - 2025/8/8
Y1 - 2025/8/8
N2 - This article contributes to theories of music and affect, highlighting listeners’ affective engagement with music as a key site for the operation of power and ideology. I take as a case study listeners’ experiences of Hindustani music in performance. In contrast with work that emphasizes the capacities of musical affect to transcend social boundaries and operate separately from (or prior to) signification, I show how the affective practices of listening in this context contribute to the reproduction of existing discourses and social formations. Drawing especially on work by Sara Ahmed, I suggest that a useful starting point for understanding how affect intersects with structures of power is to examine the affective economies and the affective orientations that shape live musical listening.
AB - This article contributes to theories of music and affect, highlighting listeners’ affective engagement with music as a key site for the operation of power and ideology. I take as a case study listeners’ experiences of Hindustani music in performance. In contrast with work that emphasizes the capacities of musical affect to transcend social boundaries and operate separately from (or prior to) signification, I show how the affective practices of listening in this context contribute to the reproduction of existing discourses and social formations. Drawing especially on work by Sara Ahmed, I suggest that a useful starting point for understanding how affect intersects with structures of power is to examine the affective economies and the affective orientations that shape live musical listening.
U2 - 10.1017/rma.2025.10039
DO - 10.1017/rma.2025.10039
M3 - Article
SN - 0269-0403
SP - 1
EP - 31
JO - Journal of the Royal Musical Association
JF - Journal of the Royal Musical Association
ER -