About this group
We are a group dedicated to the study of musics and soundscapes of East Asia, East Asian diasporas, and other milieus culturally proximate to (even if geographically distant from) East Asia–as well as the imagination of these cultural spheres–from a broadly global, comparative perspective, critiquing and crossing the non-/Western musical divide. We adopt a global, network, or assemblage perspective on research that emphasizes the intersection of local, minoritarian, national, regional, post/colonial, decolonial, and deimperial forces, whether the geographical sites involved are located in Asia or elsewhere. Often moving across cultural milieus, our work translates into the examination of various forms of hybridity involving Western, traditional, folk, popular, pop rock, avant-garde, electronic, and other musics. Our work is proximate to methodologies and topics broadly recognized as musicological–global music historiography, history and current practice of music theory and analysis, avant-gardism, hybridity, and Western art music performance in East Asia etc., but we are also open to ethnomusicological methodologies and topics broadly aligned with our vision. While most of us are members of the American Musicological Society, we welcome scholars from other music societies, as well as scholars in other fields who may be interested in our work.

Co-chairs: Gavin Lee (Soochow University), Kunio Hara (University of South Carolina), Amanda Hsieh (Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Advisors: Daniel Chua, W. Anthony Sheppard, Helan H L Yang (Hong Kong Baptist University), Thomas Irvine (University of Southampton)
Chairs of committees: Lester Hu (UC Berkeley; Conference Theme), Hannah Chang (University of Sheffield; Bibliography), Bess Liu (University of Pennsylvania; Curriculum), Brooke McCorkle (Carleton College; Archives), Brent Ferguson (College of Southern Maryland; Technology)

Board members: John O. Robison (University of South Florida), Hye-jung Park (Texas Christian University), Serena Yang (UC Davis), Peng Liu (University of Texas – Austin), Grace Kweon (UNC Greensboro), Samuel Chan (New York University), Toru Momii (Columbia University), Qingfan Jiang (Columbia University), Wenzhuo Zhang (University of Rochester), Lufan Xu (Shanghai Conservatory of Music), Charlotte D’Evelyn (Pomona College), Chui Wa Ho (New York University), Winnie W. C. Lai (University of Pennsylvania)

Teaching Resources

Teaching Resources

 

In a “teaching resource,” information is usually 1) accessible online or from an institutional library, and 2) presented in an explanatory, teaching-oriented or public-facing context, or excerpted from a research document (such as a figure in an article) for teaching purposes. 

 

What not to include:

Non-pedagogy related journal articles or books

 

Teaching resources can comprise:

[B]log posts

[F]igures embedded in articles

[P]edagogy-related articles and books

[REC]ording

[REP]ertoire list 

[S]yllabi

[T]extbooks

[W]ebpages or websites

 

If this is a personal document such as a syllabus, you can upload it to Google Drive and share it with us using a link.

 

Within each section (Korea, Japan etc.), group the items under one of the following categories. 

Avant-gardism

Multimedia

Others

Popular music

Soundscape

Traditional music

Western art music

 

CONTENTS

  1. East Asia: General
  2. Korea and diaspora
  3. Japan and diaspora
  4. China and diaspora
  5. Southeast Asia and diaspora

 

SECTION 1: East Asia: General

Avant-gardism

Multimedia

Others

Popular music

Soundscape

Traditional music

Western art music

 

SECTION 2: Korea and diaspora

Avant-gardism

[B] Unsuk Chin, Cello concerto (author: Jungmin Mina Lee)

http://musicologynow.ams-net.org/2018/04/global-perspectivesthe-story-of-unsuk.html 

 

Multimedia

Others

Popular music

Soundscape

Traditional music

Western art music

 

SECTION 3: Japan and diaspora

Avant-gardism

[B] Jo Kondo, Paregmenon (author: Anton Vishio)

http://musicologynow.ams-net.org/2018/04/global-perspectivesthe-art-of.html 

 

[B] Akemi Naito, The Woman in the Dunes (author: Barry Wiener)

http://musicologynow.ams-net.org/2018/03/global-perspectivesakemi-naito-japanny.html 

 

[B] Toru Takemitsu, Far Calls, Coming, far! (author: Tomoko Deguchi)

http://musicologynow.ams-net.org/2018/02/significance-of-parts-in-music-of-toru.html 

 

Multimedia

Others

Popular music

Soundscape

Traditional music

Western art music

 

SECTION 4: China and diaspora

Avant-gardism

[REC] Joyce Koh (Singapore), TAI. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1zA9bBw_XSbyw4qxdMNEaRZJCGPGztDax/view?usp=sharing 

 

Multimedia

Others

 

Popular music

[B] Cui Jian, “A Piece of Red Cloth” (author: Ya-Hui Cheng)

http://musicologynow.ams-net.org/2018/03/global-perspectivesrock-under-red-flag.html 

 

Soundscape

Traditional music

Western art music

 

SECTION 5: Southeast Asia and diaspora

Comment display has been disabled on this doc.