My published output represents an ongoing engagement with the issues of studying,
learning, understanding and transmitting music. More specifically, it has the music of
Ghana in West Africa as its primary focus. This music is then considered from a number
of points of view:-
• as music, where the sonic events can be charted, documented and analysed
• as 'ethnic' music where the function and meaning of this music for its culture can be
considered
• as a cultural artefact where the changing processes of transmission and preservation
are observed
• as pedagogical material where the nature of learning related to culture and the
processes of translation by the teacher and the learner are examined.
Music as object for documentation and discussion is a substantial part of Xylophone music
from Ghana, the two articles in Composing the Music of Africa and the article in the British
journal of Ethnomusicology as well as the COs, 'Bewaare - they are coming' Dagaare songs
and dances from Nandom, Ghana and 'In the time of my fourth great-grandfather ... '
Western Sisaala music from Lambussie, Ghana. These same publications also consider the
roles and function of the music within its culture. Music as a cultural artefact, its
transmission and preservation, particularly in relation to formal education, is the focus of
the two articles in the British journal of Music Education, the Music Teacher publication,
the article in Cahiers de Musiques Traditionelles, and the ESEM conference paper.
Pedagogical issues and materials form the basis for Music of West Africa, Kpatsa, and the
symposium papers.
Date of Award | 1999 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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ISSUES FOR MUSIC AND EDUCATION IN WEST AFRICA
WIGGINS, T. (Author). 1999
Student thesis: PhD