Showing posts with label call for papers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label call for papers. Show all posts

Friday, August 20, 2010

THE IMPACT OF ETHNOMUSICOLOGY: ANNUAL ONE-DAY CONFERENCE

CALL FOR PAPERS
BRITISH FORUM FOR ETHNOMUSICOLOGY in association with THE INSTITUTE OF MUSICAL RESEARCH

4TH DECEMBER 2010

The winter one-day conference of the British Forum for Ethnomusicology will be held at The Institute of Musical Research, part of the School of Advanced Study at the University of London.  The theme for the day will be 'The Impact of Ethnomusicology'.

'Impact' is both a buzz-word and a bête noire in British higher education at present. Scholars in publicly-funded institutions are increasingly being asked to assess the influence of their research outside of the academy, and this applies just as much to ethnomusicologists employed in such institutions as to others.

Nevertheless, perhaps more than any other part of the music studies field, the public-facing nature of ethnomusicology, and its emphasis on participation and social experience, on understanding musical 'being-in-the-world' as Jeff Todd Titon puts it, has ensured that ethnomusicologists have usually been very mindful of their relationship to those around them, and of the consequences their work might have. Rather than simply responding to political imperatives, therefore, we instead want to use this conference to reflect on the consequences of our work, for good and for ill, in the wider world; and, building on a long disciplinary tradition of self scrutiny and re-invention, to consider what this tells us about ethnomusicology, and how it might help us position and develop the discipline in the rapidly changing times in which we find ourselves.

The following broadly-conceived questions that we might address are offered merely as starting points:

.     In what ways, and over what kinds of timescales, have ethnomusicologists
impacted on the people with whom they work, and the environments in which that work takes place? How might the impact of such work be evaluated or valorised beyond 'conventional' ethnomusicological outputs?
.     Is ethnomusicological impact usually positive-or at least benign-or are
there clear instances of negative consequences?  How might one construe the negative impact of ethnomusicology, and should such work necessarily be avoided?
.     How does the notion of impact overlap with disciplinary considerations
of applied ethnomusicology?
.     When does ethnomusicology become so applied - that is, in its
engagements with social issues or its advocacy on behalf of particular culture bearers - that it calls into question the boundaries of conventional scholarship and supposed scholarly distance?
.     To what extent should scholarly organisations such as BFE proactively
engage with organisations such as WOMAD or South Asian Arts, and what is the relationship between such engagements and other forms of research?
.     To what extent does the impact of ethnomusicology define the discipline,
or to what extent should it be allowed to do so?
.     Notwithstanding that current discourses around impact tend to focus on
social and cultural consequences outside of the academy, how has the development of ethnomusicology impacted upon the academy as a whole, or any of its constituent parts, particularly in areas far removed from cognate disciplines such as music or anthropology?

Potential contributors are invited to submit abstracts of up to 300 words to the administrator of the IMR, Valerie James, preferably via email (Valerie.James@sas.ac.uk), or by post to:

Valerie James
Administrator
Institute of Musical Research
School of Advanced Study
University of London
Senate House
Malet Street
London WC1E 7HU

Queries relating to the theme of day or the BFE may be addressed to the conference convenor, Dr Stephen Cottrell (s.cottrell@gold.ac.uk)

The deadline for submissions is 1st September 2010, and contributors will be advised by mid September.

Further information on the conference will be uploaded on the BFE website as it becomes available:


Monday, July 19, 2010

"Musical Thinking, Thinking Musically"

"Musical Thinking, Thinking Musically."
The session will focus on exploring the ways in which music was involved with the other arts:  songs in dramatic production, as a vehicle for presenting poetry, and as the subject matter for paintings.  Understanding how music and musical performance interacted with the other arts is crucial for our perception of the place of all the arts in society.  46th International Congress on Medieval Studies, Kalamazoo, Michigan. May 12-15, 2011

Please submit your abstract by 15 September 2010 to:
Patricia Hollahan
Western Michigan Univ.
Medieval Institute Publications
1903 W. Michigan Ave.
Kalamazoo, MI 49008-5432
Phone: 269-387-8754
Fax: 269-387-8750


E-mail: patricia.hollahan at wmich.edu

The submission form can be downloaded from the following URL:  http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/Assets/pdf/congress/PIF2011.pdf

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Call for papers: double issue!

Please find attached a call for papers for a new online music research journal.

The Journal of Music Research Online (JMRO) is a freely accessible, peer-reviewed journal for the publication of scholarly research in music. It has a distinguished international editorial board, broad scope and only publishes research which is of the highest international standard. Its web site is at www.jmro.org.au.


Editors are inviting articles for the Fall and Winter 2010 double issue of Music Reference Services Quarterly, the peer-reviewed journal published by Taylor & Francis. The articles should fall within the scope of music librarianship in any of the following categories:

· administration and management
· bibliographic instruction
· collection development
· digital audio delivery
· electronic resources
· facilities
· music librarianship education
· preservation of music materials
· reference services
· cataloging
· bibliographies involving printed music and audio-visual materials

The submissions are due August 16, 2010. Conference presentations and poster sessions that would be appropriate to expand as  a journal article within the scope of Music Reference Services Quarterly are welcome.  No previously published, simultaneously submitted material will be considered. For additional information and a description of the review process, Music Reference Services Quarterly contributor guidelines may be found at: http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=t792306936~tab=submit~mode=paper_submission_instructions

All papers should be emailed to Ana Dubnjakovic (ana@vt.edu) and Michelle Hahn (mhahn@mail.smu.edu).


Thursday, July 8, 2010

Iannis Xenakis International Conference London 2011

Iannis Xenakis International Conference London 2011
Goldsmiths, University of London, Department of Music.

Organised by the Centre for Contemporary Music Cultures

Hosted by the Soutbank Centre, 1-3 April 2011

For further details and Call for Proposals please visit: www.gold.ac.uk/ccmc/xenakisconference

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Interdisciplinary Approaches to 'Voice' in Music, Theatre and Film (Song, Stage and Screen V)

3 to 5 September 2010
Winchester, United Kingdom
Websitehttp://www.songstagescreen.co.uk
Contact name: Millie Taylor and Ben Macpherson
The interdisciplinary ‘Song, Stage and Screen’ conference this year focuses on ‘voice’ in its many forms: from singing, extended voice, narration opera, or speech to the voice of composers, authors, filmmakers... in opera,theatre and film.
Organized by: University of Winchester
Deadline for abstracts/proposals:31 January 2010&n

Check the event website for latest details.

Friday, July 2, 2010

2011 Lyrica Dialogues at Harvard

CALL FOR PAPERS:

The Lyrica Society invites abstracts for its 2011 Dialogues at Harvard, themed "France the Lewd--France the Prude / France Erotique--France Pudique" scheduled for Friday and Saturday, April 1-2. Six panels, organized by historical periods (Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, Classical, Romantic, Modern) will juxtapose moral, ethical, and aesthetic dimensions of religion and spirituality with sensual, sexual, and gendered eroticism in the confluence of French music and literature.

The conference's languages will be English and French. Papers are to last no longer than 20 minutes, followed by a 10-minute question-and-answer period.

Abstracts not exceeding 250 words in length may be drafted in either language and should be submitted by September 1, 2010 to lyricasociety at aol.com.

We look forward to welcoming you to these devastatingly decadent disputations.

Cordially,

Paul-Andre Bempechat, President
Lyrica Society for Word-Music Relations
pabempec at fas.harvard.edu

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Red Strains: Music and Communism outside the Communist Bloc after 1945

13-15 January 2011, The British Academy, London

The deadline for proposals for this conference is Friday 18 June. Proposals may be sent to Robert.Adlington at nottingham.ac.uk .


Full details of conference themes, keynote speakers and proposal formats:

http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/music/research/conferences/communism.aspx

Monday, May 31, 2010

ART MUSICS OF ISRAEL: Identities, Ideologies, Influences

International Conference
ART MUSICS OF ISRAEL: Identities, Ideologies, Influences Monday 28 March – Thursday 31 March 2011 University of London, Senate House, Malet Street, London WC1 An International Conference with contributions from musicologists, ethnomusicologists, composers and performers.
Presented by the Jewish Music Institute Forum for Israeli Music at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London in association with the Institute of Musical Research, School of Advanced Study, University of London Conference Director Dr Malcolm Miller (UK)GUEST SPEAKERS TO INCLUDE:
Professor Jehoash Hirshberg (Israel), Professor Amnon Shiloah (Israel), Professor Richard Taruskin (USA), Professor Arnold Whittall (UK) and members of the Academic Board (see below).CALL FOR PAPERS Submissions are invited from scholars, composers, performers and practitioners, for papers and presentations for the above conference.

Israel has become the home of a range of art musics that are not widely familiar, and represents a fascinating crucible for the study of creativity in a young nation state. The combinations of European traditions and Middle Eastern soundscapes in all types of art music traditions in Israel reflect the diversity of socio-cultural influences on its heterogeneous population. Drawing on a wide range of geographical and historical sources, concert repertories in Israel have evolved from the melting-pot ideologies of the early to mid 20th century composers to the more multi-faceted international identities of younger generations in the 21st century.
This conference intends to explore the ways in which Israeli music and musical life throw light on aesthetic issues of wide relevance. These include the balance of regional and international musical elements, the interfaces between art and popular styles and the integration of a variety of musical sources, such as liturgical, folk, pop and local idioms. Discussion about repertories that challenge conventional notions of genre and style will also be welcome. PAPERS, OF 30 MINUTES   
There will be an award for the best paper by a postgraduate student. THE FOLLOWING THEMES
* NATIONALISM AND IDENTITY, including comparative work related to other national musics and contemporary concepts of national identity in music
* ART MUSIC TRADITIONS AND PERFORMANCE STYLES, including Arabic, European and Jewish repertories
* IDEOLOGY AND PRACTICE in the conscious use of sources such as biblical cantillation; Ashkenazi and Sephardi liturgical and folk music, Arabic musics and performing traditions
* CROSS FERTILIZATION between art/concert musics and Israeli/Middle Eastern folk and pop musics
* PERFORMANCE AND POLITICS including Palestinian-Israeli joint projects
* THE ROLE OF MUSIC INSTITUTIONS such as music schools, broadcasters, concert agencies and publishers on the impact of Israeli music inside and outside Israel
* COMPOSERS IN FOCUS: live or recorded musical presentations by or about significant composers or performers that include scholarly commentary, such as ‘A tribute to Josef Tal (1910-2008)’  

THE OFFICIAL LANGUAGE OF THE CONFERENCE IS ENGLISH. It is envisaged that selected papers will be published in a volume of proceedings. PLEASE SEND AN ABSTRACT OF 250 to 300 WORDS together with your biography of up to 150 words, and with your contact details, by Monday 5 July 2010, at 12 noon GMT to the Conference Director, Dr Malcolm Miller.

THE PROGRAMME COMMITTEE will make its decisions by Monday 27 September 2010 , and contributors will be informed soon thereafter. 

 FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION, please contact the Conference Administrator at music@sas.ac.uk. (Information about the programme, registration, travel and accommodation will be announced by the end of September 2010). CONFERENCE ACADEMIC ADVISORY BOARD Dr Malcolm Miller, Chairman (Open University in London; Director, the JMI Forum for Israel Music) Dr Rachel Beckles Willson (Royal Holloway, University of London) Professor Philip V Bohlman (University of Chicago) Julian Dawes (Composer, London) Professor Taiseer Elias (Head of Arabic Music, Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance) Professor Alexander Goehr (Emeritus, Cambridge University) Professor Jehoash Hirshberg (Emeritus, Hebrew University, Jerusalem) Professor John Irving (Director, Institute of Musical Research, London) Professor Robert Saxton (Oxford University) Professor Edwin Seroussi (Hebrew University, Jerusalem) Dr Ronit Seter, JMRC (Hebrew University, Jerusalem); Council Member, AMS (Capital Chapter).
Professor Malcolm Troup (Emeritus, City University, London) Professor Arnold Whittall (Emeritus, King’s College London) Dr Michael Wolpe (Head of Composition Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance) Dr Abigail Wood (Joe Loss Lecturer in Jewish Music, SOAS University of London)

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Feminist Theory and Music

Conference Announcement

Feminist Theory and Music 11 (Eleven): Looking Backward and Forward (20th Anniversary)

September 22-25, 2011
School of Music
Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts Arizona State University Tempe, Arizona

Scholars interested in feminist theory in music are invited to attend FTM11.
The purpose of this conference is to consider the past, current, and potential contributions of women to music and to advance the philosophical, theoretical, and practical basis of feminist theory in music. The conference will provide a forum for this growing body of scholarship and for discussions among those engaging in feminist research.

A call for papers and other presentations is forthcoming. The conference program will feature keynote speeches, paper presentations, lecture recitals, and concerts. Themes include pioneers, women exploring digital arts, eco-musics, as well as music and healing.

Conference coordinators: Jill Sullivan and Sabine Feisst, School of Music, Arizona State University.
Contact: Jill.Sullivan@asu.edu and Sabine.Feisst@asu.edu.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Livewire Festival and Symposium

The University of Maryland-Baltimore County (UMBC) Department of Music announces its first annual LIVEWIRE Festival and Symposium (Oct. 28-30, 2010). The theme for 2010 focuses on developments and trends in contemporary music in the first decade of the 21st century. We are soliciting proposals for paper presentations, lecture recitals, and demonstrations related to music making in the first decade of the millenium, including but not limited to uses of technology, performance practice, specific works or composers, trends in any and all musical genres, issues of documentation and dissemination, or issues related to under-represented groups.

Interested participants should send an abstract of 250 words or less, audio documentation and a proposed program (for lecture recitals), a short bio, and a list of technical requirements to:
Dr. Linda Dusman
FA 510 UMBC
1000 Hilltop Circle
Baltimore, MD 21250

Digital submissions are encouraged, and should be sent to dusman at umbc.edu with a subject of ?livewire?. Postmark deadline: June 25, 2010

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Time and Space in Words & Music

Call for Papers: “Time and Space in Words and Music”
The 1st Conference of the Word and Music Association Forum Technische Universität Dortmund, Germany, November 4-6, 2010

The Word and Music Association Forum (WMAF), founded in 2009 under the auspices of the International Association for Word and Music Studies (WMA), offers 'emerging scholars' additional opportunities to present papers – including but not limited to work in progress – and establish a scholarly network of those who share an interest in word and music studies. The central event of the Forum will be a biennial conference, held in alternating years with the WMA international conferences.

The first conference of the WMAF will be held at the Technische Universität Dortmund from November 4 to 6, 2010.
The conference will consist of two parts: one will explore the theme “Time and Space in Words and Music,” raising questions about the relationship of time and space in intermediality, exploring their role in such phenomena as beginnings and endings, in repetition, in cyclical versus linear time, or in narrativization/musicalization of time and space. The other part will include a number of open colloquia devoted to a discussion of works in progress. We are very pleased that Prof. Peter Rabinowitz of Hamilton College will hold the keynote address at this inaugural conference.

In order to allow adequate time for discussion papers must not exceed 20 minutes. Please submit abstracts of ca. 300 words plus a brief biographical statement (ca. 50 words) to wmaforum@googlemail.com by May 10, 2010.
You should also indicate whether your paper is intended for the conference topic or for the open forum of works in progress.

Organizing Committee:
Emily Petermann (Konstanz)
Mario Dunkel (Dortmund)
Beate Schirrmacher (Stockholm)