Listening with ‘Big Ears’: Accountability in cross-cultural music education research with Indigenous partners

Author:

Prest Anita1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Victoria, Canada

Abstract

In this theoretical article, I examine various conceptions of focused listening—including those held by specific First Nations communities—to determine how each conception might offer insights for listening while conducting cross-cultural music education research. First, I discuss the notion of “Big Ears,” as it is understood by the jazz community. Then, I turn to scholars from various First Nations in British Columbia to learn about their conceptions of listening. I outline decolonial listening strategies as proposed by Indigenous Arts scholar Dylan Robinson, before learning about the role of listening from a settler-Canadian who formally Witnessed the testimonies of Indigenous residential school survivors over a period of years while working for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. I examine the writings of music education researchers who have proposed listening as an important strategy in cross-cultural/intercultural pedagogy and research, albeit in different circumstances and for different reasons. Finally, I describe/reflect on my process of learning to listen cross-culturally as a settler-Canadian music education researcher engaged in community-based participatory research (CBPR) over the course of three studies, and list some of the ongoing questions I have. I conclude by proposing a revised understanding of Listening with “Big Ears” as one possible way for non-Indigenous researchers using a CBPR approach to enhance their application of Indigenist research methodology, especially in demonstrating their accountability to Indigenous co-researchers, participants, and communities, as they engage collaboratively in music education research.

Funder

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Music,Education

Reference29 articles.

1. Indigenous Storywork

2. Teaching as Trespass: Avoiding Places of Innocence

3. Handbook of Critical and Indigenous Methodologies

4. Biin D., Canada D., Chenoweth J., Neel L. (2021). Pulling together: A guide for researchers, Hiłḵ̓al. BCcampus. https://opentextbc.ca/indigenizationresearchers/

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