Should World Music Teachers Teach World Music?

Popular Music and the World Music Survey Course

Authors

  • Andrew Killick University of Sheffield

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jwpm.v1i1.156

Keywords:

education, teaching, textbooks, transcultural, tree of music, World Music

Abstract

The teaching of “world music” in Western academic institutions has historically focused on traditional musics studied in relation to the cultures that produced them, but often in isolation from other musical cultures and from global processes of cultural exchange and power relations. Since the 1980s, however, the term “world music” has been adopted by the music industry as a marketing category that includes “hybrid” and popular musics which obviously result from such processes. This paper surveys the responses of “world music” educators, as reflected in published teaching materials, to the question of how to handle the industry’s kind of “world music”. It argues for a “transcultural” approach in which “world music” courses would embrace literally any kind of music on an equal footing and situate all music within a single shared history. Finally, it describes an example from my own teaching practice of how such an approach might be realized.

Author Biography

  • Andrew Killick, University of Sheffield

    Andrew Killick is a Senior Lecturer in Ethnomusicology at the University of Sheffield, where he launched the MA in World Music Studies by distance learning in 2004. He holds a PhD in ethnomusicology from the University of Washington, and has taught ethnomusicology, world music and popular music at various US universities as well as at Sheffield. His research publications include In Search of Korean Traditional Opera: Discourses of Ch’anggŭk (University of Hawaii Press, 2010) and Hwang Byungki: Traditional Music and the Contemporary Composer in the Republic of Korea (Ashgate, 2013). He has published in academic journals such as Asian Music, Ethnomusicology, Ethnomusicology Forum and Korean Studies, and contributed substantially to the East Asia volume of the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music (Garland, 2002) and the Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World (Continuum, 2005–).

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Published

2014-09-05

Issue

Section

World Music

How to Cite

Killick, A. (2014). Should World Music Teachers Teach World Music? Popular Music and the World Music Survey Course. Journal of World Popular Music, 1(1), 156-182. https://doi.org/10.1558/jwpm.v1i1.156

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