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Gurbani Sangit Parampara: Sustaining Indigenous Knowledge Systems

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dc.contributor.author Khalsa-Baker, Nirinjan Kaur
dc.date.accessioned 2024-01-11T07:44:09Z
dc.date.available 2024-01-11T07:44:09Z
dc.date.issued 2023
dc.identifier.citation Khalsa-Baker Nirinjan Kaur (2023), Gurbani Sangit Parampara: Sustaining Indigenous Knowledge Systems, 12th Symposium of the ICTMD study group on music and minorities with a joint day with the study group on indigenous music and dance, Department of fine arts, University of Kelaniya Sri Lanka en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/27311
dc.description.abstract This paper will discuss the Gurbani Sangit Parampara as an Indigenous Sikh knowledge system whose practices, pedagogies, and patterns have been passed down orally over centuries. Since it takes only one generation for intangible heritage to be forgotten, it will look at the ways in which its pedagogy and practice have been remembered, shared, embodied, and safeguarded to survive through socio-political turmoil, colonization, upheaval from homeland, religio-cultural marginalization, minoritization, and erasure. Through interviews with Sikh musician memory bearers, I will argue that the Gurbani Sangit Parampara trains responsible custodians to sustain “uncolonized” streams of Indigenous knowledge. As a scholar-practitioner, I explore the processes of remembering, recovering, and regenerating Sikh ecologies of knowledge, to understand the ways in which their spiritual-aesthetic symbiosis informs adaptation and sustainability of Sikh music, knowledge, and identity over time. en_US
dc.publisher Department of fine arts, University of Kelaniya Sri Lanka en_US
dc.title Gurbani Sangit Parampara: Sustaining Indigenous Knowledge Systems en_US


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