An Ethnomusicologist’s Last Lecture: Music and Globalism, Philosophy and Religion
Autor Steven Lozaen Limba Engleză Hardback – 7 dec 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781666932966
ISBN-10: 1666932965
Pagini: 252
Ilustrații: 12 b/w illustrations; 1 table
Dimensiuni: 150 x 232 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1666932965
Pagini: 252
Ilustrații: 12 b/w illustrations; 1 table
Dimensiuni: 150 x 232 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Table of Contents
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Thinking Globally: Thoughts and the Ideas of Others on Philosophy, Religion, and Music
Chapter 2: Composers and Ideologies through a World Prism
Chapter 3: The Spirituality of the Blues and Related Sacred Music
Chapter 4: Polarities, Windmills, and the Transcendence of the Universe
Chapter 5: James Newton, Composer of Faith
Chapter 6: Masked Phantoms: Thoughts on Our Research and Scholarship in Ethnomusicology
Chapter 7: Challenges to the Euro-Americentric Ethnomusicological Canon: Alternatives for Graduate Readings,
Theory, and Method
Chapter 8: Toward a Theory for Religion as Art: From Merriam to Guadalupe
Chapter 9: Social Justice and My Work as a Music Scholar, Teacher, and Artist
Chapter 10: Free Thoughts
Bibliography
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Thinking Globally: Thoughts and the Ideas of Others on Philosophy, Religion, and Music
Chapter 2: Composers and Ideologies through a World Prism
Chapter 3: The Spirituality of the Blues and Related Sacred Music
Chapter 4: Polarities, Windmills, and the Transcendence of the Universe
Chapter 5: James Newton, Composer of Faith
Chapter 6: Masked Phantoms: Thoughts on Our Research and Scholarship in Ethnomusicology
Chapter 7: Challenges to the Euro-Americentric Ethnomusicological Canon: Alternatives for Graduate Readings,
Theory, and Method
Chapter 8: Toward a Theory for Religion as Art: From Merriam to Guadalupe
Chapter 9: Social Justice and My Work as a Music Scholar, Teacher, and Artist
Chapter 10: Free Thoughts
Bibliography
Recenzii
Steven Loza is one of few grand pioneers in music, philosophy and religion! This magisterial text is his magnum opus - a rich multidimensional and cross-cultural inquiry into the musical creativity of suffering humanity across the globe! What a great gift to us all.
An Ethnomusicologist's Last Lecture is an illuminating, provocative, and at once inspiring and perpetually challenging work. It is also an intensely personal book, one in which Steven Loza pulls no punches in articulating his views, beliefs, identity (or identities), and professional history. As such, it can and should be read as a personal testimonial of a senior, influential, and distinguished scholar in the field who has reached a point in life and career where there is no sense of need, let alone desire, to hold back from expressing their views on a great range of matters with candor, conviction, and frankness. In this mode of presentation, many gems of wisdom are shared amidst (and often in tandem with) bold pronouncements of faith, hope, cynicism, disenchantment, and rebuke.
Anyone looking for scholarship on music and religion that is animated by rich and diverse ethnomusicological experience, strong existential concerns, and a distinctive, creative voice will find much sustenance and inspiration in Steven Loza's An Ethnomusicologist's Last Lecture.
An Ethnomusicologist's Last Lecture is an illuminating, provocative, and at once inspiring and perpetually challenging work. It is also an intensely personal book, one in which Steven Loza pulls no punches in articulating his views, beliefs, identity (or identities), and professional history. As such, it can and should be read as a personal testimonial of a senior, influential, and distinguished scholar in the field who has reached a point in life and career where there is no sense of need, let alone desire, to hold back from expressing their views on a great range of matters with candor, conviction, and frankness. In this mode of presentation, many gems of wisdom are shared amidst (and often in tandem with) bold pronouncements of faith, hope, cynicism, disenchantment, and rebuke.
Anyone looking for scholarship on music and religion that is animated by rich and diverse ethnomusicological experience, strong existential concerns, and a distinctive, creative voice will find much sustenance and inspiration in Steven Loza's An Ethnomusicologist's Last Lecture.