Ethnomusicology

MUSI 10200 Intro to World Music

This course is a selected survey of classical, popular, and folk music traditions from around the world. The goals are not only to expand our skills as listeners but also to redefine what we consider music to be and, in the process, stimulate a fresh approach to our own diverse musical traditions. In addition, the role of music as ritual, aesthetic experience, mode of communication, and artistic expression is explored.

2021-2022 Spring
Category
Ethnomusicology

MUSI 41521 Graduate Teaching Forum in Music

2021-2022 Winter
Category
Ethnomusicology
Civics
Composition
Ethnomusicology
Ethnomusicology/History/Theory
Ethnomusicology;History/Theory
History
History/Civics
History/Theory
Performance
Theory
Theory/Other

MUSI 41520 Dissertation Chapter Seminar

During the five three-hour sessions of the Dissertation Chapter Seminar each quarter, Ph.D. students in their fourth and fifth years will have the opportunity to share strategies for writing up their dissertations during the years of most intensive research. We shall work collectively to develop these strategies, investigating the on-the-ground research work that students bring to the DCS from the early stages of research to the completion of chapters in preparation for the dissertation-completion year. Each session will begin with a discussion of research-to-writing strategies, and it will conclude with discussion in the seminar of one or two pre-circulated chapters by students in the DCS. Ph.D. students who are not in residence during their fourth and fifth years, because they are conducting research or no longer in residence in Chicago, will participate remotely. During the Autumn Quarter of 2020/2021, the DCS will be entirely remote. The DCS provides students an opportunity for a sustained and supportive dissertation-writing workshop for Ph.D. students in Music.

2021-2022 Winter
Category
Ethnomusicology
Civics
Composition
Ethnomusicology
Ethnomusicology/History/Theory
Ethnomusicology;History/Theory
History
History/Civics
History/Theory
Performance
Theory
Theory/Other

MUSI 41500 Diss Proposal Seminar

The purpose of this seminar is to assist students (typically in their third year) in crafting a dissertation proposal, gaining critical feedback from their peers, and honing compelling research projects. The meeting schedule of the seminar will be flexible: beginning in the fourth week of Autumn term, we will meet about once every two weeks; it may be, however, that we pick up the tempo a bit during Winter term, such that during Spring term we can slow it down a bit to allow students more time to work with their advisors on the formulation of their research projects. Once I know the schedule of the Department workshops I will schedule the meetings of the DPS to avoid conflicts with classes, workshops and other events, and distribute an initial assignment for reading and discussion.

2021-2022 Winter
Category
Ethnomusicology
Civics
Composition
Ethnomusicology
Ethnomusicology/History/Theory
Ethnomusicology;History/Theory
History
History/Civics
History/Theory
Performance
Theory
Theory/Other

MUSI 41000 Graduate Colloquium: Music

The Colloquium is a series of lectures followed by discussion and normally given by speakers from other institutions who are specially invited by the Music Department to share their recent research or compositions with students and faculty. All lectures take place on Friday afternoons.

Staff
2021-2022 Winter
Category
Ethnomusicology
Civics
Composition
Ethnomusicology
Ethnomusicology/History/Theory
Ethnomusicology;History/Theory
History
History/Civics
History/Theory
Performance
Theory
Theory/Other

MUSI 29900 Senior Research: Music

Various
2021-2022 Winter
Category
Ethnomusicology
Civics
Composition
Ethnomusicology
Ethnomusicology/History/Theory
Ethnomusicology;History/Theory
History
History/Civics
History/Theory
Performance
Theory
Theory/Other

MUSI 29700 Independent Study: Music

This course is intended for students who wish to pursue specialized readings in music or to do advanced work in composition.

2021-2022 Winter
Category
Ethnomusicology
Civics
Composition
Ethnomusicology
Ethnomusicology/History/Theory
Ethnomusicology;History/Theory
History
History/Civics
History/Theory
Performance
Theory
Theory/Other

MUSI 23821 Writing Music

Writing about music is always an act of translation: trying to set the indescribable—sound, beyond words—into a worded space. This class will explore different tactics taken by writers across form and genre and look at how they attempt to solve the problem; we’ll also practice writing about music within different conventional forms (reference article, review) in order to test out their strengths and weaknesses ourselves. We will look to the expanded approaches to music writing offered by the internet as well as older genres, as defined in the four nodes of the course: personal, contextual/analytical, fictional, and multimodal, with the idea of communication about and with music at the center of all the writing we do. As primarily a writing class, we will build a toolbox of techniques, looking to both academic and popular forms, and will focus on developing article and essay pitches for journalism and web outlets as well as gaining a broader knowledge of the different kinds of music writing there are and ways to use them separately and in combination.

Hannah Judd
2021-2022 Winter
Category
Ethnomusicology

MUSI 23321 Bollywood Beats: Music and Sound in Popular Hindi Cinema

This course explores the music and sound of popular Hindi cinema from aesthetic, social, cultural, economic, historical, and political perspectives. Students will be introduced to the musical conventions and practices of the genre, and to changes in Bollywood musical style over the course of the 20th and 21st centuries. We will watch select films with keen attention to music’s imbrication with cinematic visuality, narrative, technology, and dance, and with consideration of issues like emplacement, gender, caste, religion, capitalism, nationalism, and transnationalism. Bollywood is a cosmopolitan music, drawing from and contributing to a range of regional and international music practices; we also venture into some of those streams.

2021-2022 Winter
Category
Ethnomusicology

MUSI 23300 Introduction to the Social and Cultural Study of Music

This course provides an introduction to ethnomusicology and related disciplines with an emphasis on the methods and contemporary practice of social and cultural analysis. The course reviews a broad selection of writing on non-Western, popular, vernacular, and "world-music" genres from a historical and theoretical perspective, clarifying key analytical terms (i.e., "culture," "subculture," "style," "ritual," "globalization") and methods (i.e., ethnography, semiotics, psychoanalysis, Marxism). In the last part of the course, students learn and develop component skills of fieldwork documentation and ethnographic writing.

2021-2022 Winter
Category
Ethnomusicology
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