posted by user: ditemme || 4109 views || tracked by 4 users: [display]

ACO 2014 : Adopting the Cultural Other: Western Participatory Borrowings

FacebookTwitterLinkedInGoogle

Link: http://www.bangor.ac.uk/music//full.php.en?nid=16549&tnid=16549
 
When Jun 19, 2014 - Jun 20, 2014
Where Bangor, Gwynedd UK
Submission Deadline Jan 1, 2014
Categories    cultural studies   ethnomusicology   folklore studies   anthropology
 

Call For Papers

Ulrich Beck writes; ‘Transnational place polygamy, marriage to several places at once, belonging in different worlds: this is the gateway to globality in one’s own life.’

There are many instances of ‘Westerners’ adopting cultural practices from the developing or post-colonial world. Whereas European and North American cultural influence is often commodified, this flow in the other direction tends to be participatory and community based. We are interested in papers reporting and/or theorising research on such phenomena from music, dance, language, religion, art and other cultural forms. The conference will be interdisciplinary and perspectives from ethnomusicology, anthropology, sociology, cultural geography and other disciplines are welcome.

The language of the conference is English.

Please send abstracts of around 150 words to: Dr Jochen Eisentraut, musc03@bangor.ac.uk by January 1st 2014.

Related Resources

The Mississippi River: A Cultural Artery 2025   Call for Papers: The Mississippi: Soundings on America’s Arterial River
ICHESS 2025   2025 8th International Conference on Humanities Education and Social Sciences
Cultural intelligence 2025   Handbook on Global Leadership and Change: Advancing Cultural Intelligence in Complex Contexts
ICHESS 2025   2025 8th International Conference on Humanities Education and Social Sciences
IJMVSC 2026   The International Journal of Managing Value and Supply Chains
Music, Sound, and Memory 2026   Music, Sound, and Memory: A Transdisciplinary Conference in Music, Sound, and Literary Studies
Feminist Futures 2026   Feminist Futures and the Politics of Becoming: Intersections of Gender, Bodies, and Power