[ANPPOM-L] CFP (reminder): "Music and Politics, " an on-line journal

carlos palombini palombini em terra.com.br
Sáb Set 15 11:03:57 BRT 2007


Music and Politics, an on-line journal, http://www.music.ucsb.edu/projects/musicandpolitics/ has recently published its second issue, featuring the following articles and reviews:

Martin Lücke, “Vilified, Venerated, Forbidden: Jazz in the Stalinist Era”

Robert Neustadt, “Reading Indigenous and Mestizo Musical Instruments: The Negotiation of Political and Cultural Identities in Latin America”

Matthew Shaftel: “Singing a New Song: Stephen Foster and the New American Minstrelsy”

Guillermo Wilde, “Toward a Political Anthropology of Mission Sound: Paraguay in the 17th and 18th Centuries”

Hon-Lun Yang, “Power, Politics, and Musical Commemoration: Western Musical Figures in the People's Republic of China 1949-1964”

Eunice Schroeder, “Recent Books on Music and Politics”

Music and Politics welcomes submissions of any length that explore the interaction of Music and Politics. Areas of interest include, but are not limited to, the impact of politics on the lives of musicians, music as a form of political discourse, and the influences of ideology on musical historiography. In addition, we seek articles that examine pedagogical issues and strategies pertaining to the study of Music and Politics in the undergraduate classroom. We also welcome suggestions and/or submissions of articles on Music and Politics that have already been published in another language and that would benefit from dissemination in English translation. Submissions are encouraged from both established scholars and graduate students. Because Music and Politics is an on-line journal, authors are welcome to take advantage of the media capabilities of the web (sound files, hyperlinks, color images, and video).

-- 
"Voir le jour se lever est plus utile que d'entendre la Symphonie Pastorale" (Debussy, 1901).






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