Singing with Ghosts: Hauntology and Musical-Culinary Remembrance in Iraqi Jewish Biographical Songs
Produced by the American Society for Jewish Music’s Jewish Music Forum
Co-sponsored by the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research
Admission: Free
Registration is required.
Seventy years after the majority of Jews left Iraq—a mass emigration that marked the largest airlift population transfer to date, and the end of a 2,600 year-old Jewish presence in the area—the history of this community’s dislocation remains hotly debated. In the wake of emerging rival Arab and Jewish ethno-nationalisms, Iraqi Jews found themselves caught in the crossfire between warring ideologies. The community was subjected to a violent resocialization process into Israeli society, where they were forced to publicly abandon their original names, language, and practices of biographical Arabic song-making. This resulted in a deep sense of internalized trauma, or what Ella Shohat refers to as a kind of “visceral schizophrenia.” Nonetheless, in intimate settings, a number of singers continue to maintain secretive practices of biographical Arabic song-making. These occur in conjunction with culinary enactment and remembrance, where singers draw from multi-sensorial resources associated with their former lives in Iraq—thus rendering their exiled pasts relevant through contemporary sensorial evocation.
This presentation by Liliana Carrizo explores these musical-culinary remembrances in relation to theories of ghosting and hauntology as articulated by Iraqi Jewish authors, scholars, and musicians, and brings them into a conversation with the burgeoning field of gastromusicology. Carrizo argues that through the transnational flow of music and the senses—including sound, tactile impressions, aromas, and flavors—individuals creatively embrace and reclaim alternative histories of dislocation, including those scattered by the ashes of war.
This program is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council.