Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Ethnomusicology Journal Archive Musings


Some observations on the newsletter and journal Ethno-musicology.

·      The first issue, from December 1953, doesn’t have any articles and is described not as a journal but as a newsletter aspiring to become a journal.  It is comprised simply of an introduction discussing the aims of the publication, a section of “Notes and Reviews” with short submissions from fieldworkers outlining their current work, and a bibliography compiling a list of recent publications in the field (to be purchased on Amazon, of course).  The divisions of the bibliography are Africa, American Indian, and Other, the last comprised mostly of a list of recordings.  The call for correspondence and information in the introduction is fascinating and it gave me a sense of how scattered academic disciplines were.  Having grown up with the internet, I take it for granted that scholars can communicate easily with one another, access information immediately, and identify each other and the salient writings of their discipline.
·      The publication begins as the newsletter of “Ethno-musicology.” In 1958 it becomes “Ethnomusicology.”  I think people used to be more into dividing these types of words with a hyphen.  Archaeo-musicology is another example that came up in one of the early newsletters.
·      Without easy means of disseminating and collecting news, the world seems so much bigger!  One note reads “news of the present situation in Germany.”  Scholars had left Germany during the Nazi regime and they were trying to reconstruct the discipline there.
·      The authors make clear from the start their intention to establish an organization to connect ethnomusicologists internationally.  And they had received money from the “defunct American Society for Comparative Musicology.”  I think this is cool, because as the organization using the old term died out, it passed some of its last funds on to help start the new organization under the new term Ethnomusicology.
·      Newsletter No. 2 begins its “Notes and News” section with an entry from Belgium written in un-translated French (one of two such entries).  Would most of the academic audience have spoken French?  It’s interesting to consider language choices in this international English journal.  They don’t address the issue directly, but it seems they assume scholars in other countries to whom they have sent this publication will read English.  
·      The submissions for the second newsletter were much longer than those in the first.  The bibliography that follows includes a comprehensive compilation of works by German scholar Erich Moritz von Hornbostel.  Then the bibliography then continues on from the first newsletter, listing more work on Africa and America (they switched from American Indians to the broader term) and adding sections on Asia and Oceania and Europe.
·      F. A. Kuttner writes about his work on a two volume “history and sociology of Chinese music.”  He also criticizes “the whole system of comparative methods” as “obsolete and inadequate” and discusses his intention to establish the discipline of Far Eastern archaeo-musicology.  I wonder what became of this project.  I tried to find out on Google, but couldn’t find it, although I found an article by Kuttner.
·      Jaap Kunst writes in that he is one of the few people in Holland “working in this field.”  In his position in the ethno-musicological section of the Royal Tropical Institute, he is “all at the same time, founder, leader, assistant, clerical help, and messenger boy.”  It seems that in many countries (in Germany too, as I mentioned), a career as an ethnomusicologist is a lonely one.  Many contributors to this newsletter come across as eager to participate in a dialogue with their peers.  This level of isolation is really quite unimaginable to me, having grown up with Google and Facebook. 
·      The newsletter evolved into a journal with extended pieces by fieldworkers.  And pictures and diagrams. “Music on Ifaluk Atoll in the Caroline Islands”, by Edwin Grant Burrows, offers precise observations, but its conclusions include words and phrases such as “display the rudiments of”, “”an art so meager in total content”, and “extremely primitive.”  This piece really showed the mindset Burrows was approaching this work with: scientific (decidedly etic) analysis of a Primitive Culture.Some observations on the newsletter and journal Ethno-musicology.

·      The first issue, from December 1953, doesn’t have any articles and is described not as a journal but as a newsletter aspiring to become a journal.  It is comprised simply of an introduction discussing the aims of the publication, a section of “Notes and Reviews” with short submissions from fieldworkers outlining their current work, and a bibliography compiling a list of recent publications in the field (to be purchased on Amazon, of course).  The divisions of the bibliography are Africa, American Indian, and Other, the last comprised mostly of a list of recordings.  The call for correspondence and information in the introduction is fascinating and it gave me a sense of how scattered academic disciplines were.  Having grown up with the internet, I take it for granted that scholars can communicate easily with one another, access information immediately, and identify each other and the salient writings of their discipline.
·      The publication begins as the newsletter of “Ethno-musicology.” In 1958 it becomes “Ethnomusicology.”  I think people used to be more into dividing these types of words with a hyphen.  Archaeo-musicology is another example that came up in one of the early newsletters.
·      Without easy means of disseminating and collecting news, the world seems so much bigger!  One note reads “news of the present situation in Germany.”  Scholars had left Germany during the Nazi regime and they were trying to reconstruct the discipline there.
·      The authors make clear from the start their intention to establish an organization to connect ethnomusicologists internationally.  And they had received money from the “defunct American Society for Comparative Musicology.”  I think this is cool, because as the organization using the old term died out, it passed some of its last funds on to help start the new organization under the new term Ethnomusicology.
·      Newsletter No. 2 begins its “Notes and News” section with an entry from Belgium written in un-translated French (one of two such entries).  Would most of the academic audience have spoken French?  It’s interesting to consider language choices in this international English journal.  They don’t address the issue directly, but it seems they assume scholars in other countries to whom they have sent this publication will read English.  
·      The submissions for the second newsletter were much longer than those in the first.  The bibliography that follows includes a comprehensive compilation of works by German scholar Erich Moritz von Hornbostel.  Then the bibliography then continues on from the first newsletter, listing more work on Africa and America (they switched from American Indians to the broader term) and adding sections on Asia and Oceania and Europe.
·      F. A. Kuttner writes about his work on a two volume “history and sociology of Chinese music.”  He also criticizes “the whole system of comparative methods” as “obsolete and inadequate” and discusses his intention to establish the discipline of Far Eastern archaeo-musicology.  I wonder what became of this project.  I tried to find out on Google, but couldn’t find it, although I found an article by Kuttner.
·      Jaap Kunst writes in that he is one of the few people in Holland “working in this field.”  In his position in the ethno-musicological section of the Royal Tropical Institute, he is “all at the same time, founder, leader, assistant, clerical help, and messenger boy.”  It seems that in many countries (in Germany too, as I mentioned), a career as an ethnomusicologist is a lonely one.  Many contributors to this newsletter come across as eager to participate in a dialogue with their peers.  This level of isolation is really quite unimaginable to me, having grown up with Google and Facebook. 
·      The newsletter evolved into a journal with extended pieces by fieldworkers.  And pictures and diagrams. “Music on Ifaluk Atoll in the Caroline Islands”, by Edwin Grant Burrows, offers precise observations, but its conclusions include words and phrases such as “display the rudiments of”, “”an art so meager in total content”, and “extremely primitive.”  This piece really showed the mindset Burrows was approaching this work with: scientific (decidedly etic) analysis of a Primitive Culture.

3 comments:

  1. Hello Aaron,

    You made some very astute observations, nice work. I was especially interested by your comparisons of the newsletter vs. the internet and their functions as scholarly forums. While the print journal still serves many important purposes, I can't imagine what academic life would be like with print as the ONLY means of peer-to-peer communication. It would be unimaginably inconvenient to my mind, inculcated as I am in the digital age.

    To that end, you made a great point about the difficult translation situation; I'm not sure of the praxis nowadays, a newsletter full of articles in German, Belgian, English, etc. poses some problems of comprehension! Simultaneously though, it's demonstrative of the multinational nature of ethnomusicology, in itself the study of a magnificently diverse variety of music-cultures. I'm glad you noted the views of postwar ethno scholars too, and how their work -- while "lonely" as you so evocatively put it, they are also dogged rebuilders.

    The aspect you might have focused more on is a methodological one, looking more deeply at the ways that these long-ago ethnomusicologists went about their study and fieldwork. It could also be a good idea to make some deeper connection to the theoretical discourse we've been developing in class.

    Overall wonderful job,
    my compliments!
    Best,
    Jacob

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  2. You are perceptive to notice the "loneliness" factor; it's clear that a major purpose of the journal was simply to create a sense of connection, common purpose, and mutual encouragement among a widely scattered group of scholars who did not quite feel at home in any already-existing discipline. This is actually still the case for many ethnomusicologists. Here at Brown we have three ethno faculty and a graduate program, but at many colleges and universities there is only one ethnomusicologist -- the "lonely only," as some people say, charged with somehow covering everything outside the Western art music canon. For these scholars, the SEM journal, the annual conference meetings, and various social media platforms still play a huge role in maintaining a sense of professional identity.

    ReplyDelete
  3. That's really interesting. Thanks for the feedback!

    ReplyDelete