COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Arts and Creativities Research Group > Creative Agency and Intercultural Empathy in Applied Ethnomusicology and Community Music Action Research: a Discussion of Methodological Challenges
Creative Agency and Intercultural Empathy in Applied Ethnomusicology and Community Music Action Research: a Discussion of Methodological ChallengesAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Pamela Burnard. Musicking holds tremendous potential for reducing prejudice and increasing intercultural empathy. Increasing creative agency in music holds great possibility for increasing individual agency in extra-musical life domains, and thereby doing social justice work. But what are the most effective pedagogical strategies for enabling both creative agency and positive intercultural engagement, and how can researchers best evaluate them? What are the logistical and ethical challenges of organizing an applied ethnomusicology/community music project that integrates diverse heritage musics and creativities in a multicultural society? In this interactive working seminar, Professor of Ethnomusicology Juniper Hill will begin with an overview of her previous ethnographic research on community music programs in South Africa and her new action research project in Germany. She will then raise methodological and ethical questions relating to such projects and invite all present to contribute to a discussion of how to meet these challenges. Juniper Hill is Professor and Chair of Ethnomusicology in the Institute of Musical Research at the Julius Maximilian,University of Würzburg. A recipient of a Marie Curie, Alexander von Humboldt, and two Fulbright fellowships, among other awards, she has conducted extensive fieldwork in Finland, South Africa, and the US, and Ecuador. Her research interests include creativity, intercultural dynamics, revival, and pedagogy in higher education and informal learning. She is the author of Becoming Creative: Insights from Musicians in a Diverse World (OUP 2018) and co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of Music Revival (OUP 2014). This talk is part of the Arts and Creativities Research Group series. This talk is included in these lists:
Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsEngineering for Clinical Practice Cambridge Medieval Art Seminar Series Measuring National Well-Being – what matters to you?Other talksThe Role of Metalinguistic Awareness in Multilingual Learning and Teaching Prof Tom Thompson - Diversity of receptor signaling mechanisms within the TGFβ family In the same vein: the hepatitis B vaccine and America's dirty blood Soft robotics: Fusing actuation with perception Women Workers of the World United: Towards a global history of households, gender and work Festival of Ideas: "Change on the global stage: what makes an 'International community'?" |