2021
DOI: 10.1111/jola.12334
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Feeling to Learn: Ideologies of Race, Aurality, and Manouche Music Pedagogy in France

Abstract: This article explores how music professionals promote interdiscursive oppositions between musical aurality and musical literacy to unsettle the terms of their racialization. For many French Manouches (a subgroup of Romanies/"Gypsies"), music is a source of pride, profit, and public recognition. Manouche musicians often valorize their own sensorially centered pedagogical approaches in distinction to music literacy as espoused by French schools and conservatories. In doing so, they link notions of expressivity, … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Literature [7] proposes a new definition of music literacy that utilizes the new concept of music literacy to support and encourage popular music experiences in music education and identifies and discusses its function as a function of text to engage students in meaningful musical interactions that promote music literacy. Literature [8] proposes a polarity-centered approach to music teaching and learning that fosters higher levels of music literacy by exploring how music professionals can promote interactions between music auroras and music literacy and eliminate racial discrimination. Literature [9] performed a secondary transfer of visual face processing to obtain high levels of musical literacy by viewing pictures of musical symbols, faces, words, tools, and houses seen in MRI and evaluated the method to conclude that higher musical literacy gains additional perceptual abilities for the functioning of the visual cortex.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Literature [7] proposes a new definition of music literacy that utilizes the new concept of music literacy to support and encourage popular music experiences in music education and identifies and discusses its function as a function of text to engage students in meaningful musical interactions that promote music literacy. Literature [8] proposes a polarity-centered approach to music teaching and learning that fosters higher levels of music literacy by exploring how music professionals can promote interactions between music auroras and music literacy and eliminate racial discrimination. Literature [9] performed a secondary transfer of visual face processing to obtain high levels of musical literacy by viewing pictures of musical symbols, faces, words, tools, and houses seen in MRI and evaluated the method to conclude that higher musical literacy gains additional perceptual abilities for the functioning of the visual cortex.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Linguistic anthropologists have examined the vital role of meta‐discourse in sustaining societal narratives about tradition and have shown how they shape conceptions of tradition as stable and unchanging despite dramatic social and historical transformations (Agha, 2005; Nevins, 2013; Urban, 2001). Meta‐discourses of language and practice are integral to the production of identity among minority groups who seek to differentiate themselves from their surrounding society or to link themselves with speech communities elsewhere (Eisenlohr, 2004; Heller, 2003; Lemon, 2000; Lie, 2022; Richland, 2008). Conversely, discursive practices and musical traditions originating in specific linguistic communities have proved equally critical for constructing narratives of national belonging (Connor, 2019; Dubuisson, 2010; Edmondson, 2001; Irvine & Gal, 2000; Philips, 2000).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%