The Change of Concept: the Formation and Reflection of Applied Ethnomusicology

Main Article Content

Bao Hanshi
Sularso Sularso
Marie-Christinne B Clarisse

Abstract

If the study of Jesse Fewkes and Frances Densmore in the late 19th century is taken into account, western Applied Ethnomusicology is entering its second century. After more than one hundred years of development, Applied Ethnomusicology has basically become a relatively mature research path in the West, which not only provides scholars with a new research perspective but also enriches the subject connotation of Ethnomusicology to a certain extent with its research philosophy and value pursuit. In China, Applied Ethnomusicology has attracted more and more attention. Therefore, reviewing the development history of the discipline is not only conducive to clarifying the development context of the discipline but also conducive to reflecting on the current problems and better grasping the development trend of the discipline. In the first part of this paper, the factors influencing the birth and development of applied ethnomusicology are further discussed from within and outside the discipline, respectively based on consulting relevant literature and briefly summarizing the existing discussions of scholars. The second part mainly discusses the research characteristics of Applied Ethnomusicology, such as "pragmatic orientation", "change of researcher's identity", and "emphasis on intervention and intervention". The third part of the Applied Ethnomusicology on the "intervention", "the definition of" discipline "and the edge of two issues are discussed.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Article Details

Section
Articles

References

Aldridge, D. 1989. “Music, Communication and Medicine: Discussion Paper.” Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 82 (12): 743–46.

Barrett, Margaret S. 2016. “Attending to ‘Culture in the Small’: A Narrative Analysis of the Role of Play, Thought and Music in Young Children’s World-Making.” Research Studies in Music Education 38 (1): 41–54. https://doi.org/10.1177/1321103X15603557.

Campbell, Patricia Shehan. 2020. “At the Nexus of Ethnomusicology and Music Education: Pathways to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion.” Arts Education Policy Review 121 (3): 106–10. https://doi.org/10.1080/10632913.2019.1709936.

Dunbar-Hall, Peter. 2000. “Concept or Context? Teaching and Learning Balinese Gamelan and the Universalist-Pluralist Debate.” Music Education Research 2 (2): 127–39. https://doi.org/doi.org/10.1080/14613800050165604.

Fox, Aaron A. 2020. “Divesting from Ethnomusicology.” The Journal of Musicology 37 (1): 33–38.

Lobley, Noel. 2020. “Anthropological Sound Curation: From Listening to Curating.” In The Anthropologist as Curator, 211–26. Routledge.

Mendonça, Maria. 2010. “Gamelan in Prisons in England and Scotland: Narratives of Transformation and the ‘Good Vibrations’ of Educational Rhetoric.” Ethnomusicology 54 (3): 369–94.

Müller, Meinard, Sebastian Rosenzweig, Jonathan Driedger, and Frank Scherbaum. 2017. “Interactive Fundamental Frequency Estimation with Applications to Ethnomusicological Research.” In Audio Engineering Society Conference: 2017 AES International Conference on Semantic Audio. Audio Engineering Society.

Neubarth, Kerstin, and Darrell Conklin. 2020. “Mining Characteristic Patterns for Comparative Music Corpus Analysis.” Applied Sciences 10 (6): 1991.

Pretković, Marina, and Tea Škrinjarić. 2017. “Reviving Javanese Picture Scroll Theatre.” Etnološka Tribina 47 (40): 198–221. https://doi.org/10.15378/1848-9540.2017.40.08.

Sweers, Britta. 2020. “The European Union, Brexit, and Ethnomusicology.” The International Journal of Traditional Arts 3.

Titon, Jeff Todd, and Svanibor Pettan. 2015. “An Introduction to Applied Ethnomusicology.” In The Oxford Handbook of Applied Ethnomusicology.