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[Commlist] CfP: 2022 IASPM-Norden conference, "Disciplining Music Heritage”
Fri Feb 18 21:10:50 GMT 2022
2022 IASPM-Norden conference: "Disciplining Music Heritage"
organised jointly with the Finnish Society for Ethnomusicology
13–14 October 2022, Seinäjoki, Finland
The deadline for proposals is 31 March 2022. Please visit this website
for the call and further details:
https://www.uniarts.fi/en/events/disciplining-music-heritage-conference/
Please direct your enquiries to (discipliningmusicheritage /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(discipliningmusicheritage /at/ gmail.com)>.
+++
The next IASPM-Norden Conference takes on the topic of music heritage in
Seinäjoki 13–14 October 2022
The two-day conference is organised jointly by the Nordic branch of the
International Association for the Study of Popular Music (IASPM) and the
Finnish Society for Ethnomusicology and hosted by the Seinäjoki Unit of
the University of the Arts Helsinki.
Call for presentations
Music is deeply implicated in issues of intangible cultural heritage
(ICH), and to further critical interdisciplinary investigation into the
topic, the Nordic branch of the International Association for the Study
of Popular Music (IASPM-Norden) and the Finnish Society for
Ethnomusicology (SES) cordially invite all interested individuals to
participate in the conference. As the title of the event evinces, a
central aim is to interrogate the disciplinary boundaries, frameworks
and repercussions when dealing with music as heritage. In addition to
takes on academic disciplinary politics and idiosyncratic whims of
scholarship, the organisers invite proposals addressing all levels and
settings of music heritagisation, ranging from global organisations and
national authorities to local tourist boards and municipal
administration of creative industries.
Suitable themes and topics include, but are not restricted to, the
following:
Theory and definitions of music heritage. Scholarly debate about
music heritagisation has increased tremendously in recent years. For
instance, roughly two thirds of the peer-reviewed articles that mention
“music heritage” have been published after 2010. Additionally, special
academic journal issues have been devoted to popular music and jazz
festivals. But how exactly is music heritage defined and conceptualised
in this discussion; are certain genres and repertoires deemed heritage
more readily than others, and what is the weight of disciplinary
settings and distinctions in the process? How do ethnomusicology,
popular music studies and heritage studies interrelate as they engage
with music as intangible cultural heritage? Is “heritage music”, as
suggested by some, simply a new type of “popular music”, and if so, how
might such a reconceptualisation affect the logic of categorising music
in general?
Politics of music heritage. It may be argued that “heritage” is
primarily a value, not a thing, and that instead of asking whether
something is heritage or not, it is more pertinent to consider how
heritage is done. Thus potentially anything can become heritage, raising
immediate questions about the power relations and vested interests
involved. Given the tendency to associate musical styles and genres with
ethnicity, gender and subcultural formations in particular, at issue
here is how music heritagisation interlinks with the construction of
cultural identities. What are the ideological underpinnings at work, and
how does music heritage become implicated in the dynamics of social and
cultural inclusion and exclusion? What kind of explicit and implicit
motivations and goals are involved when constructing music as heritage
in different disciplinary environments? As heritage inevitably mobilises
ideas of a common past, questions about music heritage are further tied
to the dynamics of cultural memory and the disciplinary politics of
music historiography; what are the social and cultural groups whose
music is being remembered, historicised and heritagised, and how and why?
Music in the official lists of intangible cultural heritage. Since
2008, over three hundred phenomena relating to music and dance have been
inscribed in the UNESCO ICH lists (ich.unesco.org), ranging from ones in
need of urgent safeguarding such as Sega tambour Chagos of Mauritius, to
globally widespread idioms representative of humanity, as Reggae music
of Jamaica. Depending on definitions, the lists are dominated by forms
of traditional music, alluding to questions about the importance or even
dominance of ethnomusicological expertise in music-related ICH
administration, and relatedly, about the role of UNESCO in sanctioning
ethnomusicology as a field of heritage expertise. Also, the UNESCO
framework stipulates that national heritage agencies maintain their own
ICH lists.
Music heritage, tourism and local branding. Music is often used in
promoting certain locales, and especially in urban contexts styles and
artists of popular music are exploited as indicators of vibrant
creativity. The initiative for such action may originate from municipal
economic interests, but is sanctioned on a global level again by UNESCO
through its Creative Cities Network. Alongside Kingston and Liverpool,
the network includes forty cities ranging from Adelaide and Amarante to
Veszprém and Vranje. Here, relevant avenues of scrutiny include local
branding as heritagisation (or vice versa), interconnections between
heritage, creative industries and urban renewal, as well as dynamics of
urbanisation in general. Moreover, at issue are the ways in which music
and heritage are disciplined in the context of tourism, by tourist
offices and travellers alike.
Music heritage and interdisciplinarity. The levels and frameworks
of disciplining music heritage are interconnected, especially through
the reliance of global and national decision-making on scholarly
expertise. In the field of ethnomusicology, for instance, the
International Council for Traditional Music (ICTM) is in formal
consultative relations with UNESCO. But does this mean that
ethnomusicology is more concerned with the conventional safeguarding
paradigms of heritage management than popular music studies, where the
emphasis is arguably on critical heritage studies, and that there is
seldom any collaboration between the fields? This leads further to
questions about how the notion of heritage relates to ideals of multi-,
inter- and transdisciplinarity, especially as ethnomusicology, popular
music studies and critical heritage studies alike tend to be celebrated
as such, sometimes even in a self-aggrandising fashion.
In addition to presentations addressing the designated conference theme,
all other topics falling within the remit of IASPM or SES are welcome.
Alongside conventional conference papers, panels and posters, the
organisers welcome other presentation forms as well (e.g., films,
workshops). Please send an abstract of no more than 300 words,
preferably as a PDF file, to (discipliningmusicheritage /at/ gmail.com), no
later than 31 March 2022.
Please make sure to include in your abstract:
the name(s) of presenter(s) and their affiliation(s)
the title of the presentation
the text body, explicating the objective, materials and methods
no more than five keywords
If you are proposing a full panel with individual presentations, please
include an abstract of each presentation alongside a brief summary of
the panel. Notifications of acceptance will be sent by 15 May 2022.
Guest speakers and further information
The organisers are happy to announce Salwa El-Shawan Castelo-Branco
(NOVA University Lisbon), Sverker Hyltén-Cavallius (Swedish Performing
Arts Agency, Stockholm), Barley Norton (Goldsmiths, University of
London) and Rosa Reitsamer (University of Music and Performing Arts
Wien) as guest speakers at the conference.
Conference committee:
Chair: Antti-Ville Kärjä, University of the Arts Helsinki, Finland
Secretary: Anna Peltomäki, University of Turku, Finland
Jelena Gligorijevic, University of Turku, Finland
Juho Kaitajärvi-Tiekso, University of the Arts Helsinki, Finland
Mischa van Kan, Linnæus University, Sweden
Elina Westinen, University of Jyväskylä, Finland
Doctoral candidates wishing to participate may also be interested in a
doctoral seminar to be held on 10–12 October 2022 at the conference
venue. The theme of the seminar is the cultural study of music in all
its variety.
The conference is hosted by the Seinäjoki Unit of the University of the
Arts Helsinki. Seinäjoki is a regional urban centre located some 300 km
north from Helsinki and served by several direct train connections
daily. Details about registration, travels, accommodation and
participation fees will be communicated in due course.
Enquiries about the conference should be sent to conference secretary
Anna Peltomäki at (discipliningmusicheritage /at/ gmail.com).
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