<p><em>The Musical Gift</em> tells Sri Lanka&#39;s music history as a story of giving between humans and nonhumans and between populations defined by difference. Author Jim Sykes argues that in the recent past the genres we recognize today as Sri Lanka&#39;s esteemed traditional musics were not originally about ethnic or religious identity but were gifts to gods and people intended to foster protection and/or healing. Noting that the currently assumed link between music and identity helped produce the narratives of ethnic difference that drove Sri Lanka&#39;s civil war (1983-2009) Sykes argues that the promotion of connected music histories has a role to play in post-war reconciliation. <em>The Musical Gift</em> includes a study of how NGOs used music to promote reconciliation in Sri Lanka and it contains a theorization of the relations between musical gifts and commodities. Eschewing a binary between the gift and identity Sykes claims the world&#39;s music history is largely a story of entanglement between both paradigms. Drawing on fieldwork conducted widely across Sri Lanka over a span of eleven years--including the first study of Sinhala Buddhist drumming in English and the first ethnography of music-making in the former warzones of the north and east--this book brings anthropology&#39;s canonic literature on &quot;the gift&quot; into music studies while drawing on anthropology&#39;s recent &quot;ontological turn&quot; and &quot;the new materialism&quot; in religious studies.</p>
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