“It Was All that I Could Think of.” Migration, Youth, and Folkloric Entertainment in Rural Romania

Authors

  • Valer Simion COSMA Museum of History and Art, Zalău, Romania. valer.simion.cosma@gmail.com
  • Theodor CONSTANTINIU Folk Archive of the Romanian Academy Institute, Cluj-Napoca, Romania. theodor.constantiniu@academia-cj.ro https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7264-9859

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24193/subbdrama.2022.1.03

Keywords:

muzică populară, folklore music, folk traditions, rural youth, cultural infrastructure, transnational migration, niche TV channels.

Abstract

Abstract: A hybrid that originated in the traditional peasant music, Romanian popular music (muzică populară), as it is known from radio broadcasts, TV shows or live performances from all around the country, was developed by mixing the village music of the twentieth century with techniques and principles borrowed from the classical repertoire and other light genres. Muzica populară emerged in the interwar years, but was perfected and regulated by the communist regime, becoming one of the favorite genres of the rural and urban working class and, nowadays, it continues to have a great appeal among all age categories. Our aim was to discover the motivations that lead the village youth of Romania to involve themselves in activities dealing with muzica populară, in particular, or with folklore and traditions, in general. To accomplish this, we conducted several interviews with young people from Sălaj county, from which a few patterns emerged: the rapid familiarization with the genre due to specific TV channels; the acquired taste due to grandparents raising their grandchildren in the absence of the parents who migrated in the 2000s; the expressed devotion to the local culture and their willingness and duty to preserve and promote it. We can also explain the success of muzică populară among young people by structural factors that are at work in the whole society, namely the lack of interest of post-communist authorities in building and/or maintaining a cultural and educational infrastructure in the rural areas. Thus, this paper aims to explore contemporary rural pop culture by considering the connection between the deterioration of the cultural infrastructure in rural areas, transnational migration and the exponential development of an industry devoted to the recent muzică populară.

Author Biographies

Valer Simion COSMA, Museum of History and Art, Zalău, Romania. valer.simion.cosma@gmail.com

Valer Simion COSMA (b. 1986) is a historian, anthropologist, publicist and cultural manager. He works as a scientific researcher at the County Museum of History and Art Zalău. For two years (2015-2017), he’s been a researcher in the project “East-West”. Vernacular religion on the boundary of Eastern and Western Christianity: continuity, changes and interactions ((Seventh Framework Programme –”Ideas” Specific programme – European Research Council) hosted by Ethnographic Institute of Hungarian Academy of Sciences from Budapest, Hungary. Founder of Center for the Study of Modernity and the Rural World (2016), founder of projects such as Telciu Summer Conference (2012) and Telciu Summer School (2016). His interests are the modernization of the rural world, history and the sociology of rural elites, the religiosity of the peasants, vernacular religion and the relation between modernity / coloniality and religion in Eastern Europe, political economy, nationalism, populism and the political clientelism. Besides his academic work, he also contributed to the research and making of documentary films and theatre performances along artists as Alina Manolache,Vlad Petri, Gianina Cărbunariu, Maria Magdalena Ludewig, Adina Lazăr, Claudiu Lorand Maxim etc.

Theodor CONSTANTINIU, Folk Archive of the Romanian Academy Institute, Cluj-Napoca, Romania. theodor.constantiniu@academia-cj.ro

Theodor CONSTANTINIU is an ethnomusicologist and researcher at The Folk Archive of the Romanian Academy, Cluj-Napoca. He has a bachelor degree in violin from “Gheorghe Dima” National Music Academy, Cluj-Napoca, and a Master degree in musicology from the same institution. His PhD thesis was within the field of computational ethnomusicology and was devoted to multiple types of automatic analysis of a large database of Romanian vocal music in MIDI format. His research interests include computational ethnomusicology, artificial intelligence applications for music, the history of the Romanian ethnomusicology and its political and ideological connections. He published research papers in various academic journals, but also contributed with concert and disc reviews for different periodicals and on-line platforms.

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Published

2022-03-30

How to Cite

COSMA, V. S., & CONSTANTINIU, T. (2022). “It Was All that I Could Think of.” Migration, Youth, and Folkloric Entertainment in Rural Romania. Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai Dramatica, 67(1), 55–80. https://doi.org/10.24193/subbdrama.2022.1.03

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