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Unit information: Readings In Musicology in 2019/20

Please note: Due to alternative arrangements for teaching and assessment in place from 18 March 2020 to mitigate against the restrictions in place due to COVID-19, information shown for 2019/20 may not always be accurate.

Please note: you are viewing unit and programme information for a past academic year. Please see the current academic year for up to date information.

Unit name Readings In Musicology
Unit code MUSIM0036
Credit points 40
Level of study M/7
Teaching block(s) Teaching Block 1 (weeks 1 - 12)
Unit director Professor. Fairclough
Open unit status Not open
Pre-requisites

none

Co-requisites

none

School/department Department of Music
Faculty Faculty of Arts

Description including Unit Aims

Readings in Musicology identifies areas of musicological research which demonstrate the chances and challenges of disciplinary self-awareness: key categories of thinking about music, such as autonomy, context, and modernity; the thorny relationship between history and aesthetics; the appropriation of ideas from other disciplines (philosophy, critical theory, literary theory); the discussion of musics or aspects of music ignored or suppressed by traditional musicology (gender, non-Western music, popular and functional music). Such investigations help to understand how and why musicology developed the way it did, the reasons behind and the nature of current debates, and crucially for postgraduate students perspectives on the future of the discipline.

Aims:

Readings in Musicology identifies areas of musicological research which demonstrate the chances and challenges of disciplinary self-awareness: key categories of thinking about music, such as autonomy, context, and modernity; the thorny relationship between history and aesthetics; the appropriation of ideas from other disciplines (philosophy, critical theory, literary theory); the discussion of musics or aspects of music ignored or suppressed by traditional musicology (gender, non-Western music, popular and functional music). Such investigations help to understand how and why musicology developed the way it did, the reasons behind and the nature of current debates, and – crucially for postgraduate students – perspectives on the future of the discipline.

Intended Learning Outcomes

By the end of the unit a successful student will:

(1) demonstrate knowledge and understanding of older as well as recent musicological literature

(2) be able critically to synthesise important recent and current debates in musicology, orally and in writing

(3) be able to apply the critical tools, concepts and vocabularies acquired in the unit independently to topics and questions identified in consultation with the tutors.

Teaching Information

10 x 2-hour long group seminars, plus individual tutorials as appropriate

Assessment Information

Two essays, each 3500 words, on topics explored in class (2x40%)

Individual 10-min presentation, plus 5-min discussion, responding to one of the departmental Research Seminars on a musicological topic (20%).

Reading and References

  • C. Dahlhaus: Foundations of Music History (Cambridge, 1982)
  • I. Bent: Source materials and the interpretation of music (London, 1981)
  • R. Weiss and R. Taruskin: Music in the Western World – a history in documents (New York and London, 1984)
  • N. Cook and M. Everist (eds.): Rethinking Music (Oxford, 1996)
  • Theodor W. Adorno: Introduction to the Sociology of Music (New York, 1976)
  • Richard Leppert and Susan McClary: Music and Society: the politics of composition, performance and reception (Cambridge, 1987)

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