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Carolyn Ramzy

Profile image of Carolyn Ramzy

Associate Professor (Sociology and Anthropology; cross-appointed with Music)

Areas of Interests:

Feminist and anti-racist ethnomusicology; Egyptian Coptic Christian music; popular musics of the Middle East and connected diasporas; politics of citizenship and belonging; gender and the sounding of religious subjectivities; virtual ethnography and field research; decolonizing music scholarship; critical race and diversity studies.

杏吧原创:

I am an ethnomusicologist who focuses on Egyptian Christian popular music in Egypt and a growing diaspora in the U.S. and Canada. Specifically, I examine how Orthodox music culture shapes the Coptic community鈥檚 gendered subjectivities, and the use of virtual technologies to challenge traditional understanding of (holy) belonging, sexuality, and faith. This work builds on my dissertation, (2014) that followed a powerful religious revival that used popular song to combat, and at times, comply with structural marginalization in colonial and missionary encounters, as well as sectarian conflict in Egypt and abroad. I also trace how these song and hymns, now translated for the diaspora, facilitate important conversations about Coptic experiences of racialization, assimilation, and belonging in an American and Canadian diaspora.

I completed a Bachelor degree of Musical Arts and a Diploma of Ethnomusicology at the Eastman School of Music, my Master鈥檚 in musicology from Florida State University, and my PhD in ethnomusicology at the University of Toronto Faculty of Music.

I regularly present my research at various conferences, including the Society for Ethnomusicology, the Canadian Society for Traditional Music, the Middle East Studies Association, the American Anthropology Association, and the American Academy of Religion, the International Association for Popular Music, and the International Association for Coptic Studies.

I am cross appointed to the Institute of African Studies (IAS), the Institute for Comparative Studies in Literature, Art, and Culture (ICSLAC), and the Pauline Jewett Institute of Women鈥檚 and Gender Studies, and Music. I teach courses on ethnomusicology theory and method, music and religion, sounded globalization, as well as music and conflict.

Recent Publications

2023  鈥淐optic Women Sing Too鈥 An Exhibit for The American Religious Sound Project Gallery (Ohio and Michigan State University), .  

(2021) 鈥淒ecolonizing Coptic (Music) Studies: A Discussion.鈥 Journal of Canadian Society for Coptic Studies, in press.

(2020) 鈥溾楾he Revolution Did Not Take Place鈥: Hidden Transcripts of Cairokee鈥檚 Post-Revolution Music.鈥 Music & Politics 14, Number 1 (Winter), .

(2020) 鈥淐optic Orthodox Feminism: Popular Song and Gender Reformation in the Diaspora鈥 in Studies in Coptic Culture and Community: Ordinary Lives, Changing Times, ed. Mariam Ayad. Cairo, Egypt: The American University in Cairo Press, in press.

(2019) 鈥淩epatriating an Egyptian Modernity; Transcriptions and the Rise of Coptic Women鈥檚 Song Activism,鈥 Oxford Handbook of Musical Repatriation, edited by Robert Lancefield, Bret Woods and Frank Gunderson (Oxford University Press): 403 – 419.

(2017) 鈥淪inging Heaven on Earth: Coptic Counterpublics and Popular Song at Egyptian M奴lid Festivals,鈥 International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 49, no. 3: 375 鈥 394.

(2017) 鈥淪inging Strategic Multiculturalism: The Discursive Politics of Coptic-Canadian Protests,鈥 in Copts in Context: Negotiating Identity, Tradition, and Modernity, edited by Nelly van Doorn鈥 Harder, (Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press): 155-176.

(2017) 鈥淭o Die is Gain: Singing a Heavenly Citizenship Among Egypt’s Coptic Christians鈥 in The Afterlife in the Arab Spring (reprint of special issues of Ethnos, 2014), edited by Amira Mittermaier, (New York: Routledge), 67-88.

(2016) 鈥淎utotuned Belonging: Coptic Popular Song and the Politics of Neo-Pentecostal Pedagogies.鈥Ethnomusicology. University of Illinois Press, September 2016.

(2013)  鈥淧erforming Coptic Expressive Culture,鈥 The Coptic Christian Heritage: History, Faith, and Culture, edited by Lois Farag. Routledge Press, 2013.

(2010) . Washington, D.C.: The Performing Arts Encyclopedia: Explore Music, Theater, and Dance at the Library of Congress Website, 2010  .

(2010) . Washington, D.C.: The Performing Arts Encyclopedia: Explore Music, Theater, and Dance at the Library of Congress Website, 2010  .