ABSTRACT

Difference and Division in Music Education enriches existing diversity and social justice discourses by considering the responsibility of music education to respond to rising social discord and tensions. Although ‘hate’ is by no means a new concern for policymakers, educators, or musicians, the climate of fast communications, divisive politics, and intensified encounters with ‘difference’ has framed expressions of hate as a rising social problem to which we cannot afford complacency. This edited volume of ten contributed essays approaches ‘hate’ not as a monstrous aberration, but as a product of late modernity entangled within the complex power-relations that frame both governance and agency at the policy, institutional, and interpersonal levels.

Schools, universities, and community organisations have been positioned on the front lines of addressing ‘hate’ and cultivating a healthy society. In recognising that music education is always both inclusive and exclusive, this volume interrogates the social norms and values that comprise the ‘common good’ and simultaneously cast certain musics, expressions, individuals, or social groups as different, divisive, hateful, or hated. Difference and Division in Music Education highlights the ethical and political dimensions of teaching and learning music across a number of geographical, cultural, and educational contexts and through a rich variety of perspectives.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

Difference and Division in Music Education

part 1|67 pages

Examining the Boundaries of Inclusion

chapter 1|15 pages

Ingratitude and the Politics of Obligation

The Problem of (Un)Mutual Recognition in Music Education

chapter 2|13 pages

Zainichi Korean Students and Korean Music in Japanese Elementary School

Cultivating a Positive Ethnic Identity and Building Relationships between Koreans and Japanese

chapter 3|17 pages

Internalised Violence and Music Education

An Axiological Proposal1

chapter 4|20 pages

Resisting the ‘Us’ versus ‘Them’ Dichotomy through Music Education

The Imperative of Living in the ‘Anti-’

part 2|51 pages

Assigning, Controlling, and Contesting Musical Meaning

chapter 6|15 pages

‘You Who Hate God’1

Investing in Love and Hate through the Sound of Satan

part 3|48 pages

Beyond Good Intentions, Towards Ethical Encounters

chapter 8|13 pages

Made In/visible

Erasing Disability in Music Education

chapter 10|14 pages

Towards Solidarity through Conflict

Listening for the Morally Irreconcilable in Music Education