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Ethnomusicology Symposium


7 Mar 2014, 11:00am

305, Professor Stuart Hall Building

Event overview

Cost free
Department Music
Contact b.norton(@gold.ac.uk)

with Keynote Presentation by Professor Tina K. Ramnarine,

Symposium Keynote Presentation by Professor Tina K. Ramnarine (Royal Holloway) – “Storytelling as a Trope in Researching Orchestras”

followed by presentations by students on the MMus in Ethnomusicology by Rie Yamada, Brandon Stover, Manuela Carrillo, Valerie Balligand and Joao Ribeiro Cardoso.

Abstract: Storytelling as a Trope in Researching Orchestras

Storytelling has been theorised as a performative, narrative practice, but it has not been employed often as a trope in studies of musical performance. In this presentation, a theoretical context for exploring the possibilities of such a conceptual move within Music Studies is outlined by referring to the anthropological and performance studies approaches of Turner and Schechner. The trope of storytelling is applied to a case-study on a youth orchestra in the context of European Integration.

Biography
Tina K. Ramnarine is a musician, anthropologist and global cultural explorer. She has undertaken field research across the Nordic countries, the Caribbean, India and Indonesia. Publications include the books Creating Their Own Space: The Development of an Indian-Caribbean Musical Tradition (2001), Ilmatar's Inspirations: Nationalism, Globalization, and the Changing Soundscapes of Finnish Folk Music (2003), Beautiful Cosmos: Performance and Belonging in the Caribbean Diaspora (2007), and an edited volume Musical Performance in the Diaspora (2007). She is Professor in Music at RHUL.

This symposium is open to all.

Dates & times

Date Time Add to calendar
7 Mar 2014 11:00am
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