PROMOTION. INTERNATIONAL COUNCIL FOR TRADITIONAL MUSIC Escola de Muska " SPONSORSHIP CAP ES 36,hWORLD·CONFERENCE, RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL, JULY 4-11 2001 The International Council for Traditional Music is a Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) in Formal Consultative Relations with UNESCO Fundacao Universitaria 1r Jose Bonifacio IDATErrIME IJuly 4 July 5 July II ROOM Salao 16:00 - 8:00 9:0010:30 Dourado PM Opening Welcome Ceremony Reception 11:00 - 12:30 Plenary Session: Samba Salao 2:30 - 4:00 9:0010:30 2:30- 6:00 ,yO 9:00-10:30 9:00-10:30 Pedro Panel: The Panel: Confronting the Open Meeting 'hey Have a Word for Music in New Contexts Panel-The Caiman politics of Past, Shaping the to ".txu What is "Music'? 11:00 - 12:30 Relationships between Experience Future.. Discuss Forms 12:30 Panel: The Censorship of Music: Researchers and the and ]]:00 - 12:30 of oClHuenting Garifuna Forms and Effects Communities They Study Interpretation.. Plenary Session Organization : Collaborative Efforts 2:30 - 4:00 Panel 11:00-12:30 2:30 - 4:00 and n ~esearchers and the Recent Ethno musicological Research in Music of the 4:30- 6:00 Panel: Interchange niry Research in Indigerious Societies Middle East and Beyond Panel: Shifting Ethnomusicologists among :OO!'9neJ from South American Lowlands­ 12:30 - 1:00 Contexts, and Independent Brazilians P(}p~Iaf Mu.sic in Indonesia.. _ part I Closing Session Changing Record Production in Studying 4:3Q26:OO fanel 4:30 - 6:00 Panel Roles: The Brazil and Beyond Traditional [email protected] ta the Source: Hispanic Recent Ethno musicological Relationships 4:30- 6:00 Music Mu~CfrGrn tbe Americas in the Research in Indigenous ... - part II between General Assembly of Recl~truction of Cultural Researches ICTM Idertil)' and Gypsy Communities Salao 2:30 - 4:00 9:0010:30 9:00"10: 30 9:00-10:30 9:00 -10:30 Moniz de Music and Issues in the Study of Issu,WiJl the Study of South Asian Successes and Challenges in Music, Curing, Education and Nationalism in Aragao the Music of the Rom Mu<lc Archival Preservation Tourism the Pacific 2:30-4:00 IlC]O- ]2:30 11:00 - 12:30 1I:00 - 12:30 4:30 - 6:00 Panel: Tradition, The!WorklQIPopnlar Music Global Dances from Local Traditions Folk Music Rediscovered Samba Modernity and Identity Prastlice in the North East of 2:30 - 4:00 Panel in the Music of Recife Bra;::il Ancient Music ofIsraelJPalestine: 2:3C!-4:0() What are the Sources and How Parrjclpatory Action Research Should We treat Them? 4:30-6:00 4:30 - 6:00 GloUal MJ.,1'ic and Local Realities National Symbols and Music SalaD 10:30 - II :00 10:3":0- U:OO 10:30 - 11:00 10:30 - 11:00 Vermelllo 4:00 - 4:30 4:0[0-4:30 4:00-4:30 4:00 - 4:30 Coffee Breaks CojH" BteakS Coffee Breaks Coffee Breaks i Sala206 2:30 -4:00 9:00 - 10:30 9:00-10:30 9:00'- 10:30 I'm Archived: Issues in Research Old Songs in New Places Studies in the Music ofEast Reports of 2:30 -4:00 11:00 - 12:30 Asia Archival Musical Performances Music and Religion in Brazil 1I:00 - 12:30 Collaboration in New Contexts 2:30-4:00 Studies of Boi- Bumba in Around the Dance, Revival and Identity Brazil World 4:30 - 6:00 4:30 -6:00 New Trends in Critical Analysis New Problems for Ethno musicological Sound Archives Sala231 4:30 - 6:00 9:00 -10:30 9:0(.,10:30 9:00-10:30 The Dance, Music Ritual Mus it,ldernity and Issues in Chinese Music Ethnomusicolo and Identity Intel ~atiGrJa.liz.ation in Asia and 11:00 - 12:30 gist as Actor 2:30 - 4:00 the I!,cific Music, Minorities and and Activist Historical Studies II :(.0_ 12:30 Ethnornusicologists Issu tsin tl1~ Study of the Music of 2:30 - 4:00 East .Asia Methodological Issues 2:3( 1-4:00 4:30- 6:00 IssUI fS in \l1~ Study of Indigenous The Effect of Technology on Music Mus .1(: of Brazil and Argentina 4:3( 1-6:00 ~~ SaJla232 2:30 -4:00 9:0( '-l0: 30 9:00- 10:30 9:00-10:30 Stndy Gronp on M!.l-~ 'itand 'technology: Radio and Mediating Sounds Workshop on Archival Historical Sources of Otl1< 'tMaS', ~!edia 11:00-12:30 Preservation Techniques Part I Traditional Music 11:( '0- 12:30 Overtones and Classical Music J 1:00- 12:30 IssUi es in 0cltiil Dance Theory Workshop on Archival 2:3( '-4:0() 2:30 - 4:00 Preservation Techniques Part II Stuc:iesi]) Urban Music in Brazil Issues in the Music of Asia 4:3 ~ ',l&:2g 4:30- 6:00 N bterflotiofla\ Council for Traditional Music- 36th WorldCotlf~renc~ st Touristic 1 Floor Support (Blumer) .p. IllterttQtionQI COUt1CiI for Traditional Music - 36t h World COllferel1ce smoll lake 2 ndPIoor Program Committee urges all participants to take CONFERENCE PROGRAM advantage of this time to get to know one The International Councilfor Traditional Music another-the bonds forged at ICTM World is a Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) in Conferences often endure for decades and result Formal Consultative Relations with UNESCO in fruitful international collaboration. Program In addition to its World Conferences, the ICTM International Council for Traditional Music sponsors a number of Study Groups, whose 36th World Conference concentration on a single topic allows Rio de Janeiro, Brazil participants to meet in smaller groups and focus July 4-11, 2001 on specific subjects. Participants interested in the activities of any of the Study Groups that is General Introduction holding a business meeting at this Conference The first ICTM World Conference held in South should feel free to attend them. The ICTM also America since 1954 has attracted scholars from sponsors Colloquia-single meetings on a 43 countries, addressing a great variety ofissues special topic. If participants wish to pursue ideas in over 180 separate presentations. The subject growing out of the meeting in a Colloquium matter of the presentations reflects the diversity format, please contact the Secretary General. ofinterests, training, and approach that are found around the world in the study of music. This conference brings many people together who Information on the Program have never met, who share only a limited The sessions will all be held in the Forum de knowledge of any language in common, butwho . Ciencia e Cultura of the Universidade Federal will be changing the directions of scholarship in de Rio de Janeiro, at Avenida Pasteur 250, Praia the future. Vermelha, Rio de Janeiro, unless otherwise indicated. The evening film session and the The organization ofthis conference, with its long Saturday afternoon cultural events will be held ., coffee breaks, long lunches, free evenings, -and elsewhere. Most of the sessions will be held in days without scheduled papers, is meant to the same five or six rooms in the building, and provide the participants with many opportunities signs and local assistants will guide you to them. to meet informally under circumstances where The Program Committee tried to limit the they can overcome the inevitable language number of sessions to no more than five at any difficulties and culturally forged perspectives in one time. It inevitably happens that two papers relative privacy and camaraderie. The city of participants wish to hear are being presented Rio de Janeiro is filled with comfortable places simultaneously. To increase participants' ability to eat, drink and talk late into the night­ to move from session to session, the Session something its residents enjoy doing as well. The Chairs have been asked to start their sessions on 6 time,andtofollow theprogrambylimitingeachpaper 36thWorld ConferenceProgram Committee: to twenty minutes ofpresentation and ten minutes Prof. Anthony Seeger, U.S.A. (Chair); Prof. of discussion. Thismeans thatpapersin each session Samuel Mello Araujo Jr., Brazil; Prof. R.J. de should be starting every half hour: at 9:00,9:30, Menezes Bastos, Brazil; Prof. Gerard Behague, 10:00; 11:00, 11:30, 12:00; 2:30, 3:00, 3:30; 4:30, U.S.A.; Prof. Dieter Christensen, U.S.A.; Dr. 5:00; 5:30. If the person scheduled to deliver a Dumisani Maraire, Zimbabwe (Deceased); Prof. paper does not appear, Session Chairs have been Victoria Eli Rodriguez, Cuba; Dr. Adrienne L. asked not to start the next paper until the next half Kaeppler, U.S.A.; Mr. Don Niles, Papua New hour. Guinea; Dr. Jonathan P.J. Stock, U.K.; Prof. Yamaguti Osamu, Japan. Acknowledgements The 36th World Conference Organizing The Chair of the Program Committee would like Committee has worked long and hard to make to acknowledge the hard work and very the conference a success in Rio de Janeiro. thoughtful contributions of his fellow Program Without them there would be no conference: Committee members, listed below. We mourn the loss of Dr. Dumisani Maraire who did not Prof. Samuel de Araujo, Brazil (Chair); Profa. live to see the results ofour collective work. The Elizabeth Travassos, Brazil; Profa. Martha Program Chair also thanks the three University Ulhoa, Brazil; Profa. Cassia Frade, Brazil; Prof. of California at Los Angeles graduate students Mario Costa, Brazil; Profa. Rosa Zamith, Brazil. who assisted him with the preparation of the program and the abstracts: Jack Bishop, Andrew . The following Institutions and Agencies have Connell, and Juniper Hill. Finally, the program provided funding for the conference: UNESCO, and abstract books could not have been CNPq, FAPERJ, Fundacao Jose Bonifacio, and completed without the assistance of Nerthus various departments and sectors of the Federal Christensen, editor of the ICTM Directory and University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ).
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