Carole Pegg is an anthropologist, ethnomusicologist, and senior researcher at the University of Cambridge. She is the author of Mongolian Music, Dance and Oral Narrative: Performing Diverse Identities.
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Acknowledgments Languages, Transliteration, Translation Companion Website Part One: Emplacement, Ontologies, Bodies Introduction 1. Performative Bodies Part Two: Sounding Middle Worlds 2. Human Communities 3. Spirit Actors, Spirit Places, Nomadic Landscapes 4. Ancestors and Archaeology Part Three: Attuning to Upper and Lower Worlds 5. The White Way 6. With-Spirit Epic Performer 7. Shamanic Roads Coda Appendix Participants Notes Glossary References Index
"An original and fascinating exploration of music and place among a range of closely linked societies of the Altai, Khakas, and Tyva/Tuva republics in Inner Asia. The author shows how senses of place and movement are actually generated by the sensory qualities of performance practices. Pegg explains how every aspect of the landscape and cosmology is musical, as humans are 'eager to connect sonically' with these forces and with their ancestors."--Piers Vitebsky, author of Living without the Dead: Loss and Redemption in a Jungle Cosmos