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Sounds, Ecologies, Musics

  • Editor: Allen, Aaron S.
  • Editor: Titon, Jeff Todd

Book

$32.25

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Contents

  • Sounds, Ecologies, Musics
  • Table of Contents
  • Chapter 1. Aaron S. Allen (UNC Greensboro) and Jeff Todd Titon (Brown University): Ecologies for Music and Sound Studies
  • PART I: Music, Sound, Ecologies, and the Natural Environment
  • Chapter 2. Aaron S. Allen (UNC Greensboro): Ecoorganology: Toward the Ecological Study of Musical Instruments
  • Chapter 3. James Edwards (SINUS Markt- und Sozialforschung) and Junko Konishi (Okinawa Prefectural University of Arts): 'Like the Growth Rings of a Tree': A Socio-ecological Systems Model of Past and Envisioned Musical Change in Okinawa, Japan
  • Chapter 4. Julianne Graper (University of Texas at Austin): Bat City Limits: Music in the Human-Animal Borderlands
  • Chapter 5. Juha Torvinen and Susanna Valimaki (University of Helsinki): Music, Ecology, and Atmosphere: Environmental Feelings and Socio-cultural Crisis in Contemporary Finnish Classical Music
  • PART II: Music, Sound, and Traditional/Indigenous Ecological Knowledges
  • Chapter 6. Rebecca Dirksen (Indiana University): Haiti, Singing for the Land, Sea, and Sky: Cultivating Ecological Metaphysics and Environmental Awareness through Music
  • Chapter 7. Chad Hamill (Northern Arizona University): Coyote Made the Rivers: Indigenous Ecology and the Sacred Continuum in the Interior Northwest
  • Chapter 8. Jennifer C. Post (University of Arizona): Resilient Sounds: Rakiura Stewart Island, Aotearoa New Zealand
  • Chapter 9. Denise Von Glahn (Florida State University): Relational Capacities, Musical Ecologies: Judith Shatin's Ice Becomes Water
  • PART III: Music, Sound, and Ecologies in Interdisciplinary Perspective
  • Chapter 10. Robert Labaree (New England Conservatory of Music): Biologists, Musicians, and the Ecology of Variation
  • Chapter 11. Mark Pedelty (University of Minnesota): Recomposing the Sound Commons: The Southern Resident Killer Whales of the Salish Sea
  • Chapter 12. John E. Quinn, Michele Speitz and Omar Carmenates (Furman University), and Matthew Burtner (University of Virginia): The Audible Anthropocene: Sustainable Bridging of Arts, Humanities, and Sciences Scholarship Through Sound
  • Chapter 13. Huib Schippers (Independent Scholar) and Gillian Howell (University of Melbourne): 'Things fall apart
  • the centre cannot hold': Impacts of Human Conflict on Musispheres
  • Chapter 14. Jeff Todd Titon (Brown University): Eco-trope or Eco-tripe?: Music Ecology Today
  • Index