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[ecrea] CFP: BFE One-Day Conference - Radio and Ethnomusicology: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives
Thu Mar 03 13:54:08 GMT 2016
BFE One-Day Conference – Saturday 22 October, 2016
Radio and Ethnomusicology: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives
University of Edinburgh and the Museum of Communication, Scotland
Keynote: Timothy D. Taylor (UCLA)
Radio was one of the most important innovations of the 20th century,
reconfiguring notions of intimacy, ushering in new forms of consumer
economy, and playing a primary role in the rise of entertainment culture
(Taylor 2012). At the same time, radio contributed to the
democratisation of everyday life, reinvented a sense of national
community, and created new communicative potentials for marginalised
social groups (Scannell 1989). Politically, radio has been at the centre
of global events such as the rise of National Socialism in Germany in
the 1930s (Birdsall 2012), the Algerian Revolution (Fanon 1965), Cold
War antagonism and cooperation (Badenoch et al 2013), and the Rwandan
Genocide (Kellow and Steeves 1998). Across the world, it has been a tool
of nation building, nationalism and internationalism, war and peace,
sounding and silencing.
Despite proclamations of the death of radio (and television) in the 21st
century, as a mode of broadcasting its contemporary importance has not
diminished. Rather, broadcasters have migrated online, new digital
listening forums have adopted techniques and practices from older media,
and listening publics continue to be shaped by radio. Globalising and
localising processes have been described as complementary rather than
organised hierarchically (Appadurai 1996), with sounds and technologies
made meaningful locally. Radio has adapted to the new technological
forms and social logics of the digital era; it could therefore be argued
that radio is as influential as ever.
It is a good time, then, to examine the relationships – both historical
and contemporary – between radio and ethnomusicology. Within the
discipline, radio has been heard in numerous ways: as a force of
modernity that would destroy traditional music cultures; a means of
circulating and developing respect for certain musics; a vehicle for
musical scholarship; an accompaniment to musical migration and
displacement; and a contact zone between music cultures. Moreover, radio
broadcasters have frequently worked collaboratively with
ethnomusicologists, commissioning, archiving and broadcasting field
recordings (Davis 2005, Arnberg et al 1969, Reigle 2008). And radio
serves as a productive site of ethnomusicological study today in its
capacities as mediator, disseminator, and disciplinary mouthpiece.
Radio means different things in different times and places, and
ethnomusicology is well equipped to provide form-sensitive and
ethnographic accounts of its varying roles in musical and social life.
This one-day conference seeks to explore these relationships by
addressing themes including:
o Roles of radio in local and global music cultures
o The politics of music broadcasting
o Radio and musical mediation
o Availability and access to broadcast archives
o Broadcasting folk and world musics
o Radio, displacement and migration
o Digital broadcasting, web cultures, and ethnomusicology
o Histories of radio and fieldwork
o Nationalism, internationalism, and nation building
We invite proposals of individual papers of 20 minutes’ duration, or
panels of 3 related papers. Abstracts should be no more than 300 words,
and should be sent to (radioethnomusicology /at/ gmail.com) by 5pm on Monday
2nd May. Notification of acceptance will be no later than 6th June.
Please note that presenters must be registered members of the British
Forum for Ethnomusicology (https://bfe.org.uk/join-bfe).
Conference Website: https://sites.eca.ed.ac.uk/radioethnomusicology/
DEADLINE for abstracts: 2nd May, 5pm.
Programme Committee:
Dr Annette Davison, Prof Simon Frith, Dr Mark Percival, Dr Tom Wagner,
Dr Tom Western
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