COMPANION BOOKSITE
Fraught Balance: The Embodied Politics of Dabke Dance Music in Syria
Interested in reading and teaching the book and want to know more about how it is organized? Go here.
Readers who wish to go directly to the media for each book chapter can use this button list, organized by chapter.
All royalties will be donated in support of Syrian arts and social initiatives. Looking for ways to support non-profit organizations servicing a range of social needs and artistic efforts for and by Syrians? Browse my curated list of organizations.
How to read or teach Fraught Balance
In poetic homage to the predominant choreosonic patterns of dabke practice, Fraught Balance is organized into three units, each of which comprises two chapters. The book is designed to be read through in its entirety; alternatively, individual parts can be selected for specific reading and teaching aims. Interludes serve as brief essays that introduce each of the three parts, offer background on relevant historical and political contexts, and discuss the methodologies that support the work of a given unit.
PART I, “Folkloric Dance,” looks at the gendered, ethnocentric and classed discourses entangled in cultural heritage practices as part of the formation of secular, territorial nationalism and the political ideologies of the authoritarian state. I ask what “Syria” means, and for whom, through a history of how social dabke became a national folkloric dance that projected specific visions of cultural citizenship in the newly independent Syrian nation-state (chapter 1) and in the Assadist regime (chapter 2).
PART II, “Everyday Performance,” examines gender and class dynamics in everyday practices and social spaces. I unpack the embodied and affective dynamics of dabke practice by focusing on the sonic and kinesic interactions that animate the social space of the live parties where dabke is practiced. Based on sensory and ethnographic fieldwork, this part portrays the dancing body as a listening body (chapter 3) and details how musicians craft a digital sonic aesthetic attuned to listeners’ desire for loud and distorted forms of live sound (chapter 4) that energize dancing.
PART III, “Conflict and Displacement,” extends the analyses of gender, class, and cultural difference from the earlier essays to the polarized politics of revolution, war, and displacement. I consider the role of dabke during these cataclysmic conditions, insisting on the tension between the affective capacity of performance to both forge and fragment social bonds. These final chapters employ digital ethnography (chapter 5) and in situ ethnography (chapter 6) to identify gendered spaces of power and reckon with the power of representation in precarious conditions of migration.
Table of Contents
Introduction
PART I Folkloric Dance
Interlude Modern Syrian Society and State
Chapter One Virtuous Figures
Chapter Two Staging Difference
Part II Everyday Performance
Interlude Syria in the 2000s
Chapter Three Floating Rhythms
Chapter Four Sonic Spectacularity
Part III Conflict and Displacement
Interlude Conflict, War, and Displacement
Chapter Five Conflicting Movements
Chapter Six Translating Syrianness
Coda
Organizations and Projects supporting Syrian arts and society
- Karam Foundation: a foundation by Syrians for Syrians that strives for sustainable, transformative impact on the lives of Syrian refugees
- Syrian Community Network: a Chicagoland-based non-profit organization that services refugee and immigrant needs and builds intergenerational community
- Baynatna بيناتنا : a decolonial non-profit cultural space in Berlin for Arabic-speaking individuals and their literary and artistic works from West Asia and North Africa
- Syria Music Preservation Initiative: a non-profit music organization based in NYC that promotes and celebrates the diverse ethnic and regional musical traditions of Syria

