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Bhabha, Homi K., 1949- . Location of culture / Homi K. Bhabha. 0415016355 (hbk.) series London ; New York : Routledge, 1994.
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN761 .H43 1994


belongs to The Other project
tagged culture hybridity other by ncrimes ...on 13-NOV-10
Music has a range of different functions in different cultures

Nettl, Bruno, 1930- . Study of ethnomusicology : thirty-one issues and concepts / Bruno Nettl. New ed. 0252030338 (cloth : alk. paper) series Urbana : University of Illinois Press, c2005.
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML3798 .N47 2005


belongs to Towards a biocultural musicology project
tagged culture function music universals by ncrimes ...on 01-OCT-08
Music has a range of functions in different cultures

. Worlds of music : an introduction to the music of the world's peoples / Jeff Todd Titon, general editor. 4th ed. 0534591035 series Belmont, Calif. : Schirmer/Thomson Learning, 2001, c2002.
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML3545 .W67 2002
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML3545 .W67 2002


belongs to Towards a biocultural musicology project
tagged culture function music universals by ncrimes ...on 01-OCT-08
Music is an interactive and participatory medium

Small, Christopher, 1927- . Musicking : the meanings of performing and listening / Christopher Small. 0819522562 (alk. paper) series Hanover, NH : University Press of New England [for] Wesleyan University Press, c1998.
Call#: Van Pelt Library ML3845 .S628 1998


 

 

"All members of a culture that practice music are expected to be abelt to engage with music in culturally appropriate ways" (1: Cross 2008)

"Introduction
In this paper I shall make a number of claims about music. I shall claim that music,
like language, is a fundamental part of the human communicative toolkit. It is
unique and specific to humans, but music is not "natural" while language is
symbolic; music and language are both equally symbolic and natural domains of
human thought and behaviour. I shall propose that music - musicality - underpins
the intellectual and social flexibility displayed by modern humans. As a corollary of
this, I shall claim that many of the most important abstract concepts that frame and
give meaning to human interaction - such as social justice, that aspect of morality
which is concerned with the achievement of equity in human relations - have their
roots in human musicality. I am not proposing that without music there can be no
social justice; I am simply submitting that without musicality the flexibility in
managing social relations that characterises modern humans and that constitutes the
matrix within which abstract conceptions such as social justice can take form is less
likely to have arisen."

belongs to Towards a biocultural musicology project
tagged culture engage music universal by ncrimes ...on 01-OCT-08