Beschreibung:
Listening Across Borders: Musicology in the Global Classroom provides readers with the tools and techniques for integrating a global approach to music history-within the framework of the roots, challenges, and benefits of internationalization-into the modern music curriculum.
Introduction: Why Internationalization? (CHRISTOPHER LYNCH) / PART I: Creating Global Citizens / 1. Western Music History as a Teaching Topic in Taiwan: Pedagogy as Transculturation (JEN-YEN CHEN) / 2. Listening Didactics as a Tool for Inclusion (GIUSEPPINA LA FACE BIANCONI) / 3. Using North Indian Vocal Exercises for Aural Training in the Globalized Classroom (ANDREW ALTER) / PART II: Teaching with Case Studies of Intercultural Encounters / 4. Teaching Global Music History: Comparative Approaches in Chinese Historiography (ANNIE YEN-LING LIU AND BLAKE STEVENS) / 5. Listening to Intercultural Encounters in Canadian Music (MARY I. INGRAHAM) / 6. Learning from Bartók: The Promises and Perils of a Globalized Music History (W. ANTHONY SHEPPARD) / PART III: Challenges and Opportunities / 7. Global Music History in the Transnational Classroom: A View from South India (PHILIP TAYLOR) / 8. Teaching and Learning Music History in Brazil: History, Challenges, and Proposals (PABLO SOTUYO BLANCO) / 9. Teaching Western Music in Jordan: An Anglicized-Russian Female Music Educator Perspective (ANNA E. GALAKHOVA) / 10. Misalignment of University-Based Music Education with Modern-Day South African Musical Praxis (MADIMABE GEOFF MAPAYA)