Copyright
Fatima Lahham;Published On
2025-04-30ISBN
Language
- English
Print Length
196 pages (xiv+182)Dimensions
Weight
Media
OCLC Number
1518045573THEMA
- AVA
- JBSF11
- GTS
BISAC
- MUS020000
- SOC028000
- PER011020
- SOC008000
- ART009000
Keywords
- Early Music
- Feminist Ear
- Decolonial Methodologies
- Improvisation Studies
- Ottoman-English Relations
- Historical Performance Practices
Improvising Otherwise
A Decolonial Feminist Approach to Improvisation in Early Modern English Culture
- Fatima Lahham (author)
This volume redefines how we approach early music and cultural histories, intertwining feminist, decolonial, and creative perspectives. Fatima Lahham delves into the improvisational practices of early modern England, situating them within a rich tapestry of musical sources, theological texts, travel narratives, and natural histories. Inspired by Sara Ahmed’s notion of the “feminist ear,” the book amplifies voices and histories often unheard, re-examining the cultural interplay between England and the Ottoman Empire in the seventeenth century.
This groundbreaking study bridges disciplines and engages with critical race studies to explore decolonial methodologies. Lahham challenges traditional historiographies, integrating improvisation studies and early modern creativity to transform our understanding of historical performance and inspire new practices today. Tracks from her album punctuate the text, fostering an innovative, multi-modal reading experience, while creative prompts invite readers to craft their own improvisations.
At once scholarly and imaginative, this book expands the boundaries of historically informed performance and cultural studies. By mobilizing improvisation as a tool for understanding and re-imagining history, Imagining Otherwise offers a vital contribution to early music, feminist theory, and the study of England’s global engagements.
Endorsements
Lahham’s project is highly original, as it frames our understanding of early modern improvisational practices within a decolonial frame. She considers how we might ‘mobilise practices of improvision’ into our study of early music and advocates for a more inclusive historically informed approach that incorporates voices of those who have been silenced or marginalized.
Prof Amanda Eubanks Winkler
Director of the Department of Music at Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University
Additional Resources
Contents
Introduction
(pp. 1–16)- Fatima Lahham
- Fatima Lahham
- Fatima Lahham
Interlude: Bees on the Moon
(pp. 87–96)- Fatima Lahham
- Fatima Lahham
- Fatima Lahham
Epilogue
(pp. 151–156)- Fatima Lahham
Contributors
Fatima Lahham
(author)Fatima Lahham (b.1993) is a musician and researcher with interests across musical improvisation, feminist methodologies, early modern historiographies, and music and healthcare. After studies at Oxford University and the Royal College of Music in London, she received an AHRC studentship to support her PhD research at the University of Cambridge. Since then she has held academic positions at the Royal College of Music and Royal Holloway, University of London, and is currently employed as a researcher at Nordoff & Robbins, the UK’s largest music therapy charity. Fatima performs widely as a recorder player across baroque music, Arabic music and various improvisatory settings. Her solo album 'bulbul' (2022) has been followed by several singles and she also works as a community musician.