Of rhythms and refrains in contemporary Damascus: Urban space and Christian-Muslim coexistence

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Of rhythms and refrains in contemporary Damascus : Urban space and Christian-Muslim coexistence. / Bandak, Andreas.

In: Current Anthropology, Vol. 55, No. Supplement, 12.2014, p. s248-s261.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bandak, A 2014, 'Of rhythms and refrains in contemporary Damascus: Urban space and Christian-Muslim coexistence', Current Anthropology, vol. 55, no. Supplement, pp. s248-s261. https://doi.org/10.1086/678409

APA

Bandak, A. (2014). Of rhythms and refrains in contemporary Damascus: Urban space and Christian-Muslim coexistence. Current Anthropology, 55(Supplement), s248-s261. https://doi.org/10.1086/678409

Vancouver

Bandak A. Of rhythms and refrains in contemporary Damascus: Urban space and Christian-Muslim coexistence. Current Anthropology. 2014 Dec;55(Supplement):s248-s261. https://doi.org/10.1086/678409

Author

Bandak, Andreas. / Of rhythms and refrains in contemporary Damascus : Urban space and Christian-Muslim coexistence. In: Current Anthropology. 2014 ; Vol. 55, No. Supplement. pp. s248-s261.

Bibtex

@article{2d6543f14ba44edc96409a6f1580670c,
title = "Of rhythms and refrains in contemporary Damascus: Urban space and Christian-Muslim coexistence",
abstract = "Christians in the Middle East have traditionally clustered around cities. As minorities in a Muslim majority context, difference manifests itself in many ways. In recent decades, the sounds of the city, in the form of calls to prayer from minarets and church bells, have increased, while green and blue lighting likewise crafts a plural setting that is not only audible but visible to all. In this article, I explore Christian ways of inhabiting the city in Damascus, Syria. The orchestration of space is intensifying as the region appears to be becoming an ever more vulnerable place to live for a Christian minority. I argue that an anthropological engagement with Christianity may do well to listen to the particular refrains that are formed in and of the city. Such an engagement attests to the ways in which Christianity is lived in particular locations but also how Christianity is continuously made to matter.",
author = "Andreas Bandak",
year = "2014",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1086/678409",
language = "English",
volume = "55",
pages = "s248--s261",
journal = "Current Anthropology",
issn = "0011-3204",
publisher = "University of Chicago Press",
number = "Supplement",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Of rhythms and refrains in contemporary Damascus

T2 - Urban space and Christian-Muslim coexistence

AU - Bandak, Andreas

PY - 2014/12

Y1 - 2014/12

N2 - Christians in the Middle East have traditionally clustered around cities. As minorities in a Muslim majority context, difference manifests itself in many ways. In recent decades, the sounds of the city, in the form of calls to prayer from minarets and church bells, have increased, while green and blue lighting likewise crafts a plural setting that is not only audible but visible to all. In this article, I explore Christian ways of inhabiting the city in Damascus, Syria. The orchestration of space is intensifying as the region appears to be becoming an ever more vulnerable place to live for a Christian minority. I argue that an anthropological engagement with Christianity may do well to listen to the particular refrains that are formed in and of the city. Such an engagement attests to the ways in which Christianity is lived in particular locations but also how Christianity is continuously made to matter.

AB - Christians in the Middle East have traditionally clustered around cities. As minorities in a Muslim majority context, difference manifests itself in many ways. In recent decades, the sounds of the city, in the form of calls to prayer from minarets and church bells, have increased, while green and blue lighting likewise crafts a plural setting that is not only audible but visible to all. In this article, I explore Christian ways of inhabiting the city in Damascus, Syria. The orchestration of space is intensifying as the region appears to be becoming an ever more vulnerable place to live for a Christian minority. I argue that an anthropological engagement with Christianity may do well to listen to the particular refrains that are formed in and of the city. Such an engagement attests to the ways in which Christianity is lived in particular locations but also how Christianity is continuously made to matter.

U2 - 10.1086/678409

DO - 10.1086/678409

M3 - Journal article

VL - 55

SP - s248-s261

JO - Current Anthropology

JF - Current Anthropology

SN - 0011-3204

IS - Supplement

ER -

ID: 129177076