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Sound Teaching is written for vocal and instrumental music
teachers, music performers with a portfolio career and music
students at conservatoires and universities. Music students
undertaking practice-related research will find examples of
research methodologies and projects that are informative for their
studies. Musical participants of all kinds – students, teachers,
performers, and audiences – will find new ways of understanding
their practice and experience through research.
Drawing on unique multi-arts, multi-city scholarly research,
Understanding Audiences for the Contemporary Arts makes a timely
and urgent contribution to debates about the place of arts and
culture in contemporary society. The authors critically interrogate
the challenges of access, diversity, privilege and responsibility
in contemporary art. Asking who benefits from, pays for and
consumes the arts, the book highlights fresh, forward-thinking
audience and organisational attitudes that show the potential of
live arts engagement to contribute to engaged citizenship.
Complemented by comparative global analysis, the cutting-edge
insights in this book are relevant for interdisciplinary
researchers across audience studies and beyond. Enhanced by a new
framework for the understanding audience engagement, the book is
relevant to scholars, policymakers and reflective practitioners
across the spectrum of arts and cultural industries management.
Chapter 7 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open
Access PDF under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license here.
Sound Teaching is written for vocal and instrumental music
teachers, music performers with a portfolio career and music
students at conservatoires and universities. Music students
undertaking practice-related research will find examples of
research methodologies and projects that are informative for their
studies. Musical participants of all kinds - students, teachers,
performers, and audiences - will find new ways of understanding
their practice and experience through research.
Drawing on unique multi-arts, multi-city scholarly research,
Understanding Audiences for the Contemporary Arts makes a timely
and urgent contribution to debates about the place of arts and
culture in contemporary society. The authors critically interrogate
the challenges of access, diversity, privilege and responsibility
in contemporary art. Asking who benefits from, pays for and
consumes the arts, the book highlights fresh, forward-thinking
audience and organisational attitudes that show the potential of
live arts engagement to contribute to engaged citizenship.
Complemented by comparative global analysis, the cutting-edge
insights in this book are relevant for interdisciplinary
researchers across audience studies and beyond. Enhanced by a new
framework for the understanding audience engagement, the book is
relevant to scholars, policymakers and reflective practitioners
across the spectrum of arts and cultural industries management.
Chapter 7 of this book is freely available as a downloadable Open
Access PDF under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license here.
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