ABSTRACT

At a time of transformation in the music history classroom and amid increasing calls to teach a global music history, Navigating Stylistic Boundaries in the Music History Classroom adds nuance to the teaching of varied musical traditions by examining the places where they intersect and the issues of musical exchange and appropriation that these intersections raise. Troubling traditional boundaries of genre and style, this collection of essays helps instructors to denaturalize the framework of Western art music and invite students to engage with other traditions—vernacular, popular, and non-Western—on their own terms.

The book draws together contributions by a wide range of active scholars and educators to investigate the teaching of music history around cases of stylistic borders, exploring the places where different practices of music and values intersect. Each chapter in this collection considers a specific case in which an artist or community engages in what might be termed musical crossover, exchange, or appropriation and delves deeper into these concepts to explore questions of how musical meaning changes in moving across worlds of practice. Addressing works that are already widely taught but presenting new ways to understand and interpret them, this volume enables instructors to enrich the perspectives on music history that they present and to take on the challenge of teaching a more global music history without flattening the differences between traditions.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Teaching Liminal Musicking

part I|90 pages

Denaturalizing Western Art Music

chapter 1|25 pages

European Art Music is an Ethnic Music

Fraying the Edges in a Music History Classroom

chapter 2|22 pages

From Beijing to Paris

Teaching Music of the Global Eighteenth Century

chapter 3|23 pages

“Song of the Spirit Dance” and Native American Songs

Teaching about Appropriation in Late Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Symphonic Compositions

part II|52 pages

Teaching Blended Musics

chapter 5|19 pages

Music of the Hyphen

Diaspora Music as Process and Product

chapter 7|15 pages

Por ti seré

Jarocho Fusion and Revivalism in “La Bamba”

part III|66 pages

Training Global Musicians

chapter 8|22 pages

From Brazilian Worship Houses to a U.S. College

Recontextualizations of Afro-Brazilian Religious Music and Movement

chapter 10|24 pages

The Anti-Colonial Conservatory

The Case of the University “Folk Band”