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Harmonic Networks: The Nazir Ahmad Music Society and the Politics of Cultural Collaboration in Pakistan

Authors
  • Zahid Hussain

    Author
Keywords:
Nazir Ahmad Music Society, Pakistani Cultural History, State Patronage, Institutional Collaboration, Music Politics
Abstract

This paper presents a historical analysis of the Nazir Ahmad Music Society (NAMS) at Government College University, Lahore, examining its role as a key cultural institution in post-colonial Pakistan. I move beyond the society’s self-representation as an archive or pedagogical centre to instead analyse its history through the lens of its "collaborative networks." I propose that these networks—with state media, folk institutions, university clubs, and private industry—were not neutral or organic, but were in fact politically contingent strategies for survival, legitimacy, and relevance. I argue that the NAMS’s institutional trajectory provides a microcosm of the Pakistani state's shifting strategies of cultural production. By tracing how the NAMS’s "collaborations" aligned with successive state ideologies—from Ayub Khan’s developmental-modernism and Bhutto’s folk-populism, to Zia-ul-Haq’s Islamisation and the neoliberalism of the 2000s—I demonstrate that the society was an active agent in negotiating and performing a "respectable" national musical identity. I suggest the NAMS is a case study in how cultural institutions use collaboration not just for artistic exchange, but as a political mechanism to navigate the complex, often contradictory, relationship between state power, Islamic piety, and artistic expression.

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Published
2025-12-03
Section
Articles
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Copyright (c) 2025 Zahid Hussain (Author)

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

How to Cite

Harmonic Networks: The Nazir Ahmad Music Society and the Politics of Cultural Collaboration in Pakistan. (2025). The Historian, 38-48. https://doi.org/10.65463/26