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At left, ethnomusicology students Marzanna Poplawska, Nick Hockin, Amy Ingram and Hae Joo Kim gather during the Society for Ethnomusicology’s 51st Annual Conference Nov. 16-19 in Honolulu. |
| Posted 12.20.06 |
Graduate Students, Alumni, Faculty Present Papers at Ethnomusicology Conference |
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Nine Wesleyan graduate students studying
ethnomusicology ended a recent conference on a high note. Each student presented papers at The Society for Ethnomusicology’s 51st Annual Conference Nov. 16-19 in Honolulu. This year’s topic was “Decolonizing Ethnomusicology.” “The annual convention is the focal point of the year; these meetings offer a great chance to network with fellow grad students, eminent senior scholars, and former alums,” says Mark Slobin, professor of music. “In addition, this is a record-breaking number of graduate students that presented.” Thembela Vokwana presented “Can We Sing Together? Performing Nationhood through Choral Festivals in South Africa.” Andrew Dewar presented "Sonic Explorations: On the Analysis of Intercultural Experimentalism;” Marzanna Poplawska presented “Diaspora or not yet--Indonesian Christians in the USA;” and Junko Oba presented “2 80,000 Invisible Men: Music, Identity, and the
Story of Nikkei/Zainchi Brazilian Community in Japan, Summer 2005.”Hae Joo Kim presented "Riding the Wave of Nostalgia and Melodrama through Dae Jang Geum;” Po-wei Weng presented “The Survival of Oral Tradition in a Modernizing Genre: 'Oral Notation' in Taiwan's Peking Opera Percussion Music;” Ian Eagleson presented “Rural Popular Music and Ethnic Identity: Benga Dance Bands of the Luo Community in Western Kenya;” Chris Miller presented "Indonessian Musik Kontemporer and the Issue of 'Western Influence;’” Vincenzo Cambria presented “Decolonizing the Archive: Documentation and the Production of Knowledge in a Participatory Ethnomusicological Research in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.” Amy Ingram presented "Parang: Finding a Place for Spanish Creole Identity in the Trinidadian National Calendar; and Nicholas Hockin presented "Drums, Headscarves, and Mothers' Dances at Weddings in Bamako, Mali: Local Change on the Margins of Globalization;” This was
Hockin's second time presenting a paper at the SEM conference. This year,
the Ph.D. candidate in ethnomusicology, presented segments of his
dissertation, which is scheduled to be completed next year. |
| By Olivia Bartlett, The Wesleyan Connection editor. Photos contributed. |