The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #142730   Message #3291946
Posted By: Desert Dancer
18-Jan-12 - 12:13 AM
Thread Name: MIT: course on women & folk music
Subject: MIT: course on women & folk music
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology has started a thing called "OpenCourseware": "MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) is a web-based publication of virtually all MIT course content. OCW is open and available to the world and is a permanent MIT activity."

I happened on one course entitled, Issues of Representation: Women, Representation, and Music in Selected Folk Traditions of the British Isles and North America, a graduate level course taught in Fall 2005 by Prof. Judith Tick and Prof. Ruth Perry.

Course Description

"This subject investigates the special relation of women to several musical folk traditions in the British Isles and North America. Throughout, we will be examining the implications of gender in the creation, transmission, and performance of music. Because virtually all societies operate to some extent on a gendered division of labor (and of expressive roles) the music of these societies is marked by the gendering of musical repertoires, traditions of instrumentation, performance settings, and styles. This seminar will examine the gendered dimensions of the music - the song texts, the performance styles, processes of dissemination (collection, literary representation) and issues of historiography - with respect to selected traditions within the folk musics of North America and the British Isles, with the aim of analyzing the special contributions of women to these traditions. In addition to telling stories about women's musical lives, and studying elements of female identity and subjectivity in song texts and music, we will investigate the ways in which women's work and women's cultural roles have affected the folk traditions of these several countries."

It's a seminar so there's no lecture content, but along with the reading (and listening) list, questions for discussion are listed. An interesting assortment of stuff.

~ Becky in Tucson