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  1. Ethnomusicology. Interdisciplinary work, field study, and explorations of music and culture have been hallmarks of the UW Ethnomusicology program since its beginnings in 1963. Ethnomusicology encompasses studies of music and culture and integrates aspects of musicology and anthropology as well as music performance, history, and theory.

  2. Ethnomusicology. The word "ethnomusicology" was adopted by a group of music scholars in the 1950s to replace "comparative musicology". In the early and mid-20th century, the field was often defined to encompass musical traditions other than European art music (the study of which is sometimes labelled "historical musicology").

  3. 1) A global approach to music, regardless of area of origin, style, or genre; 2) An understanding of music as social practice: viewing music as a human activity that is differently shaped by social and cultural environments; 3) An engagement in ethnographic and historical research: ethnographic fieldwork and/or historical inquiry that includes ...

  4. The inception of ethnomusicology as a scientific field was thus coeval with the first efforts to couple traditional music and cultural identity within a conceptual network. As this network became the template for examining new ethnomusicological data and theory, so did the history of the field become fundamentally unified.

  5. 1946: 218, 237-238). Jaap Kunst (1950: 7) advocated the term ethnomusicology as a more accurate and descriptive designation of the field of research long known as comparative musicology, and this term has received wide acceptance. The linking of ethnology to musicology in the new name emphasizes a phase

  6. Ethnomusicology is the study of music in its social and cultural contexts. Ethnomusicologists employ a global perspective on music (encompassing all geographic areas and types of music) and engage in ethnographic fieldwork (observing and participating in music-making) and in historical research. More information.

  7. Ethnomusicology is the study of why, and how, human beings are musical. This definition positions ethnomusicology among the social sciences, humanities, and biological sciences dedicated to understanding the nature of the human species in all its biological, social, cultural, and artistic diversity.

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