Area Studies in Ethnomusicology: Africa (2019): Difference between revisions

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Time:  TR - 3:30 PM - 4:50 PM
Time:  TR - 3:30 PM - 4:50 PM
short link: http://bit.ly/m4ghd19a
   
   



Revision as of 16:57, 4 December 2018

Area Studies in Ethnomusicology: Africa
Music 472 (undergraduate) and 582 (graduate)

Instructor: M. Frishkopf

Winter Term, 2019

Time: TR - 3:30 PM - 4:50 PM

short link: http://bit.ly/m4ghd19a


This seminar course centers on understanding music and other performance arts in Africa as a sustainable, scaleable strategy for maintaining a health society: social cohesion, social justice, multicultural and multigenerational connectivity, empowerment, community building, civil society, community health, cultural continuity, and development. We will study musical types across the continent, both traditional and contemporary, local forms and newly-formulated interventions, from the perspective of their efficacy for social progress. We will also study interventions introduced by NGOs and ethnomusicologists as means of promoting these social and cultural goals. In particular, we will study Music for Global Human Development (http://m4ghd.org) -- applying music as a collaborative social technology towards social justice across a spectrum of issues, from health and education, to peace, civil society, and social integration. We will focus on application of these ideas and methods in a wide range of regions and countries, including Egypt, Liberia, Ghana, Ethiopia, Uganda, Rwanda, South Africa, and elsewhere, through critical review of current literature, local practices, and musical interventions both past and present. We will also design m4ghd projects for the future. We will take up the means by which such projects are designed, implemented, and assessed, following a Participatory Action Research framework.

Some examples of such projects that I have worked on include:

Many ethnomusicologists who study African music have worked on similar projects, sometimes as their primary foci, and sometimes as side-projects serving the communities in which they have worked and lived.

The course will be run as a small seminar in which assigned readings, films, and recordings are discussed and analyzed. You will review these materials in short weekly writing assignments. A final paper will center on a proposed project of your own.

In addition there will be an opportunity to interact with special guest artists from Ghana and Sudan, to be hosted by the Department in March.

NB: There are absolutely no prerequisites for the course. Neither musical skills nor prior coursework in Music is required. The course is offered for both undergraduate and graduate credit.