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In Following the Elephant, Bruno Nettl edits articles drawn from
fifty years of the pioneering journal Ethnomusicology. The roster
of acclaimed scholars hail from across generations, using other
works in the collection as launching points for dialogues on the
history and accomplishments of the field. Nettl divides the
collection into three sections. In the first, authors survey
ethnomusicology from perspectives that include thoughts on defining
and conceptualizing the field and its concepts. The second section
offers milestones in the literature that critique major works. The
authors look at what separates ethnomusicology from other forms of
music research and discuss foundational issues. The final section
presents scholars considering ethnomusicology--including recent
trends--from the perspective of specific, but abiding, strands of
thought. Contributors: Charlotte J. Frisbie, Mieczylaw Kolinski,
Gerhard Kubik, George List, Alan P. Merriam, Bruno Nettl, David
Pruett, Adelaida Reyes, Timothy Rice, Jesse D. Ruskin, Kay Kaufman
Shelemay, Gabriel Solis, Jeff Todd Titon, J. Lawrence Witzleben,
and Deborah Wong
In this highly praised and seminal work, Alan Merriam demonstrates
that music is a social behavior-one worthy and available to study
through the methods of anthropology. In it, he convincingly argues
that ethnomusicology, by definition, cannot separate the
sound-analysis of music from its cultural context of people
thinking, acting, and creating. The study begins with a review of
the various approaches in ethnomusicology. He then suggests a
useful and simple research model: ideas about music lead to
behavior related to music and this behavior results in musical
sound. He explains many aspects and outcomes of this model, and the
methods and techniques he suggests are useful to anyone doing field
work. Further chapters provide a cross-cultural round-up of
concepts about music, physical and verbal behavior related to
music, the role of the musician, and the learning and composing of
music. The Anthropology of Music illuminates much of interest to
musicologists but to social scientists in general as well.
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