| ESEM XXVII: Taking Part |
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| Écrit par Christine Guillebaud |
| Lundi, 21 Février 2011 12:51 |
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Please note deadline for abstracts: 17 March 2011 CALL FOR PAPERSESEM XXVII: Taking Part
Conference theme‘Taking Part’ is an aspect of music making in most cultures. This conference will focus on the theme of participation, investigating performance from many different perspectives – ethnological, sociological, psychological, cosmological, as well as musical – and consider communities, groups, families, and individuals in their roles as music makers. While we need to analyse what exactly is going on musicologically within a performance, we also need to examine what is going on emotionally, physiologically, and aesthetically, for the participants, to get to the core of meaning and function. An obvious case study in the UK might be the growing phenomenon of community/folk choirs. By adopting an ethnographic approach the researcher comes to understand their role and performance milieux, how the music is made, what characterises it, and how individuals express their identity through the choirs. Sessions will be built around themes, with presentations grouped as far as possible in ways that facilitate discussion and debate. The following list of themes and topics is indicative only:
Free PapersWe will also consider including selected free papers in order to allow dissemination of important recent achievements in the field. However, abstracts related to the main theme will have priority. The John Blacking Memorial Lecture – a regular feature of ESEM meetings – will be presented by Professor Anthony Seeger, University of California at Los Angeles. FormatESEM is a seminar rather than a conference: we host collegial meetings open to researchers from all over the world in which participants can gather to share ideas and discuss recent work in ethnomusicology in an informal setting. In order to do this, we may need to limit the number of paper presentations (which must not exceed 20 minutes in length), but nonetheless we do all we can to support those who wish to attend. We welcome proposals for complete panels (of up to 90 minutes). We shall also consider the presentation of research in the form of posters and a limited number of evening video projections. Proposals should be submitted in the form of a 300-word abstract by email, in an attachment including your full name and contact details, to conference organiser Ian Russell at ESEM@abdn.ac.uk by 17 March 2011. A draft programme will be announced in April 2011 and conference registration will open. Programme committeeMartin Clayton (Durham University) |
