Résumés
Abstract
This article is a reflection on how narratives of Canadian music scholarship have shifted since the late 1980s, generally moving toward an array of “diversity narratives.” It questions how government policy, academic institution building, increased interdisciplinarity, new configurations of individual and collective experience, and new regional or nationalist discourses have played a role in this shift. It suggests that Canadians may be particularly well poised to lead in the study of how multiple narratives and “sovereign aesthetics” can coexist.
Résumé
Cet article propose une réflexion sur les transformations des récits des chercheurs en musique canadienne au cours des années 1980, transformations qui ont généralement mené à un récit davantage centré sur les diversités. On y examine comment les politiques gouvernementales, la construction d’institutions universitaires, l’augmentation de l’interdisciplinarité, les nouveaux modèles d’expérience individuelle et collective et de nouveaux discours identitaires régionaux et nationaux ont joué un rôle dans ces transformations. On avance que les Canadiens sont sans doute particulièrement bien placés pour montrer la voie dans l’étude de la façon dont plusieurs récits et « esthétiques souveraines » peuvent coexister.
Parties annexes
Bibliography
- Bannister, Jerry. 2002. “Making History: Cultural Memory in 20th-Century Newfoundland.” Newfoundland Studies 18 (2): 175–94.
- Beckwith, John. 2012. Unheard Of: Memoirs of a Canadian Composer. Waterloo, ON: Wilfrid Laurier University Press.
- Diamond, Beverley. 1994. “Narratives in Canadian Music History.” In Canadian Music: Issues of Hegemony and Identity, ed. Beverley Diamond and Robert Witmer, 139–72. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press.
- Diamond, Beverley. 2006. “Canadian Reflections on Palindromes, Inversions, and Other Challenges to Ethnomusicology’s Coherence.” Ethnomusicology 49 (3): 324–36.
- Doyle, Alan. 2014. Where I Belong. Toronto: Doubleday.
- Dueck, Byron. 2013. Musical Intimacies and Indigenous Imaginaries: Aboriginal Music and Dance in Public Performance. New York: Oxford University Press.
- Echard, William. 2005. Neil Young and the Poetics of Energy. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
- Elliott, Robin. 1997. Counterpoint to a City. Toronto: ECW.
- Elliott, Robin, and Gordon E. Smith, eds. 2001. Istvan Anhalt: Pathways and Memory. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press.
- Elliott, Robin, Friedemann Sallis, and Kenneth DeLong, eds. 2011. Centres and Peripheries. Roots and Exile (Waterloo, ON: Wilfrid Laurier University Press.
- Feld, Steven. 2012. Jazz Cosmopolitanism in Accra. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
- Guilbault, Jocelyne. 2014. Roy Cape: A Life on the Calypso and Soca Bandstand. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
- Hayes, Ian. 2014. “‘It’s a balancing act. That’s the secret to making this music fit today’: Negotiating Professional and Vernacular Boundaries in the Cape Breton Fiddling Tradition.” PhD diss., Memorial University, St. John’s.
- Hoefnagels, Anna, and Beverley Diamond, eds. 2012. Aboriginal Music in Contemporary Canada: Echoes and Exchanges. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press.
- Jessup, Lynda, Andrew Nurse, and Gordon E. Smith, eds. 2008. Around and about Marius Barbeau: Modelling Twentieth-Century Culture. Mercury Series. Ottawa: Canadian Museum of Civilization.
- Kallmann, Helmut. 1960. A History of Music in Canada 1534–1914. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
- Kallmann, Helmut. 2013. Mapping Canada’s Music: Selected Writings of Helmut Kallmann, ed. John Beckwith and Robin Elliott. Waterloo, ON: Wilfrid Laurier University Press.
- Karantonis, Pamela, and Dylan Robinson, eds. 2010. Opera Indigène. Farnham, UK: Ashgate.
- Keillor, Elaine. 1994. John Weinzweig and His Music: The Radical Romantic of Canada. Metuchen: Scarecrow.
- Keillor, Elaine. 2005. Native Drums, www.native-drums.ca.
- Keillor, Elaine. 2006. Music in Canada: Capturing Landscape and Diversity. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press.
- Keillor, Elaine. 2007. Native Dance, www.native-dance.ca.
- Kina-nda-niimi Collective. 2014. The Winter We Danced: Voices from the Past, the Future, and the Idle No More Movement. Winnipeg: Arp Books.
- Klassen, Judith. 2008. “Encoding Song: Faithful Defiance in Mexican Mennonite Music Making.” PhD diss., Memorial University, St. John’s.
- Macdonald, Christopher J. 2009. Rush, Rock Music and the Middle Class: Dreaming in Middletown. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
- MacLeod, Marion. 2013. “Raising the Bar: The Reciprocal Roles and Deviant Distinctions of Music and Alcohol in Acadiana.” PhD Diss., Memorial University, St. John’s.
- Marsh, Charity, and Gordon E. Smith, eds. 2011. “Spaces of Violence: Signs of Resistance.” Thematic Issue, MUSICultures 38.
- Mason, Kaley. 2007. “Situating Musical Lives in Multiethnic Canada: Listening for the Non-Western ‘I.’” In Folk Music, Traditional Music, Ethnomusicology: Canadian Perspectives, Past and Present, ed. Anna Hoefnagels and Gordon E. Smith, 94–101. Newcastle, UK: Cambridge Scholars.
- Morey, Carl. 1997. Music in Canada: A Research and Information Guide. New York: Garland.
- Muller, Carol. 2011. Musical Echoes: South African Women Thinking in Jazz. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
- Nabokov, Peter. 2002. A Forest of Time: American Indian Ways of History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Nixon, Rob. 2011. Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
- Ochoa Gautier, Ana Maria. 2014. Aurality: Listening and Knowledge in 19th-Century Colombia. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
- Osborne, Evelyne. 2012. “The Most (Imagined) Irish Place in the World? The Interaction between Irish and Newfoundland Musicians, Mass Media and the Contruction of Musical Senses of Place.” PhD diss., Memorial University, St. John’s.
- Pegley, Kip. 2008. Coming to You Wherever You Are: MuchMusic, MTV and Youth Identities. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press.
- Piercey, Mary. 2013. “‘Inulariuyunga Imngirnik Quvigiyaqaqtunga!’—‘I’m a real Inuk. I love to sing!’ Interactions between Music, Inummariit, and Belief in an Inuit Community since Resettlement.” PhD diss., Memorial University, St. John’s.
- Quigley, Colin. 1995. Music from the Heart. Athens: University of Georgia Press.
- Regan, Paulette. 2009. Unsettling the Settler Within. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.
- Robbins, James. 1990. “What Can We Learn When They Sing, Eh? Ethnomusicology in the American State of Canada.” In Ethnomusicology in Canada, ed. Robert Witmer, 47–56. CanMus Docs 05. Toronto: Institute for Canadian Music.
- Scales, Christopher. 2012. Powwow Music and the Aboriginal Recording Industry on the Northern Plains. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
- Schabas, Ezra, and Carl Morey. 2000. Opera Viva: Canadian Opera Company, the First Fifty Years. Toronto: Dundurn.
- Simpson, Audra, and Andrea Smith, eds. 2014. Theorizing Native Studies. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
- Simpson, Leanne. 2013. The Gift Is in the Making: Anishnaabeg Stories. Winnipeg: High Waters Press.
- Tulk, Janice. 2008. “῾Our Strength Is Ourselves’: Identity, Status and Cultural Revitalization among the Mi’kmaq in Newfoundland.” PhD diss., Memorial University, St. John’s.
- Vance, Jonathan. 2009. A History of Canadian Culture. New York: Oxford University Press.
- Whitesell, Lloyd. 2008. The Music of Joni Mitchell. New York: Oxford University Press.
- Young, Neil. 2012. Waging Heavy Peace: A Hippie Dream. New York: Blue Rider.