bursa escort bursa escort escort bursa escort bursa bursa escort bursa escort bursa escort bursa escort

Ethnomusicology

Colloquium: Nancy Guy, University of California at San Diego

nancy_guy.jpg 132 Music Building, free Reception to follow Cosponsored by Asian Studies Center Flowing down Taiwan's Tamsui River: Towards an Ecomusicology of the Environmental Imagination What can musical evidence tell us about how people relate to and imagine their physical environments? My primary data derive from Taiwan, notable for its environmental degradation. Specifically, this talk takes performative expressions—including popular song, theatre, and film—that reference Taiwan's Tamsui River as its subject. The Tamsui, which flows about 13 kilometers from Taipei to the northern port city of Tamsui, has captured the imagination of songwriters and other artists for decades. Photos from the first half of the 20th-century depict life along the Tamsui as exuberant. Songs from this period portray idyllic scenes from the river's shores: birds sing, flowers bloom, lovers court. These historic images stand in stark contrast to the Tamsui as it has existed in recent times. As economic growth took precedence over ecological concerns, the Tamsui became an open sewer. The river's imminent ecological collapse became the subject of numerous songs, films, and theatrical pieces beginning in the early 1980s. The song Super Citizens, for example, in which pop star Luo Dayou sang of Taipei's garbage flowing down the Tamsui, was one of the first songs to give expression to an emerging "toxic consciousness."

Busy in Bogotá

sheehy.jpg Carolina Santamaria Delgado (PhD 06, ethnomusicology) sent us photos from a conference on interdisciplinary music that she co-organized: Primer Encuentro Interdisplinario de Investigaciones Musicales (First Interdisciplinary Encounter of Music Research). She is pictured above with Dr. Daniel Sheehy from the Smithsonian Institution, one of the keynote speakers. A Professor of music at Pontificia Universidad Javeriana in Bogotá Colombia, Carolina writes,
“I'm very happy in Bogotá, and working at the Universidad Javeriana's Music Department. I have been pretty busy over the last two years since I came back, taking care of several courses as well as organizing a national music conference that was held last May. That was a real challenge, actually at some point I thought it was easier to get a PhD than to put together a conference!”