Affiliation:
1. Performance Studies, University of Newfoundland
2. Humanities and Philosophy, University of Central Oklahoma
3. Media, Bauhaus-University Weimar
Abstract
Abstract
Beginning in the late 1970s, ethnomusicologists began to engage with ideas from phenomenology (a movement within Continental European philosophy). This article discusses key concepts from phenomenology and explores how ethnomusicologists developed them to address fundamental issues in the study of music and culture—the problem of musical meaning and musical interpretation, the nature of the performance event, and questions of music and being. Tracing the intellectual history of phenomenological ethnomusicology, the article synthesizes findings from research on a broad range of musical traditions and offers new insights into a variety of topics of interest to contemporary music scholars, including embodiment, self-reflexivity, flow and musical involvement, trance, time and temporality, research methods, and the politics of music. The article closes by discussing the explosion of phenomenological work in ethnomusicology that has occurred in recent years and suggests new directions for research.
Reference258 articles.
1. Music, Affect and Atmospheres: Meaning and Meaningfulness in Palauan Omengeredakl.;International Journal of Traditional Arts,2018
2. Abels, Birgit. 2020. “Bodies in Motion: Music, Dance and Atmospheres in Palauan Ruk.” In Music as Atmosphere: Collective Feelings and Affective Sounds, edited by Friedlind Riedel and Juha Torvinen, 165–183. New York: Routledge.
3. Absaroka, Ruard. 2020. “Timbre, Taste and Epistemic Tasks: A Cross-Cultural Perspective on Atmosphere and Vagueness.” In Music as Atmosphere: Collective Feelings and Affective Sounds, edited by Friedlind Riedel and Juha Torvinen, 70–94. New York: Routledge.
4. A Phenomenology of Whiteness.;Feminist Theory,2007