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Immigration, Rituals and Transitoriness in the Mediterranean Island of Malta
In: Journal of ethnic and migration studies: JEMS, Band 38, Heft 10, S. 1661-1680
ISSN: 1469-9451
Immigration, Rituals and Transitoriness in the Mediterranean Island of Malta
In: Journal of ethnic and migration studies: JEMS, Band 38, Heft 10, S. 1661-1680
ISSN: 1369-183X
?al Kirkop: a village in Malta – By Jeremy Boissevain
In: The journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Band 13, Heft 4, S. 1053-1054
ISSN: 1467-9655
Los sindhis y el comercio en el Mediterráneo
In: Revista CIDOB d'afers internacionals, Heft 78, S. 121-140
ISSN: 1133-6595
Cosmopolitan connections: the Sindhi diaspora, 1860 - 2000
In: International comparative social studies 9
Sacred Island or World Empire? Locating Far-Right Movements In and Beyond Malta
In: Journal of contemporary European studies, Band 16, Heft 3, S. 393-406
ISSN: 1478-2790
SPECIAL ISSUE: THE EXTREME RIGHT IN CONTEMPORARY EUROPE: CULTURAL AND SPATIAL PERSPECTIVES: Sacred Island or World Empire? Locating Far-Right Movements In and Beyond Malta
In: Journal of contemporary European studies, Band 16, Heft 3, S. 393-406
ISSN: 1478-2804
What's in a Bang? Fireworks and the Politics of Sound in Malta
In: Space and Culture, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 143-155
ISSN: 1552-8308
Festa is what people in Malta call the annual celebration of town and village Catholic patron saints. Fireworks, including loud petards, are one of its ingredients. Anthropologists working in Malta have tended to think of them as a sort of aural backdrop to festa. The point of the article is to foreground the sound of fireworks as an anthropological object in its own right. It is correct to say that there is no festa without fireworks. They constitute part of its multisensory Gesamstkunstwerk: their penetrative power means that they purvey festa to individual bodies; their sound structures its temporality; there is much sonic rivalry between different festa groups; and they spatialize festa in a way that renders their location ambiguous. Fireworks are "sound" to some and "noise" to others. For the latter, they go against the (largely middle-class) expectations of a "proper" soundscape. The contest is played out in the form of discourses on gender as well as the notion of "moderation," itself seen as a corollary of a European modernity.