1:45 – 3:45 pm
Critical Perspectives on Ethnomusicological Theory
Chair: Deborah Wong, University of California, Riverside
1:45 Knowledge and Power in Early Ethnomusicology
Katie J. Graber, Otterbein University
2:15 Voicing Senegalese Hip Hop: A Critique of Prescriptive Research Models
Catherine M. Appert, Cornell University
2:45 Using a Phylogenetic Approach in Ethnomusicology: What about the Evolution of Musical Gabonese Heritage?
Silvie S. Le Bomin, Evelyne Heyer, Guillaume Lecointre, Museum National d’Histoire Naturelle
3:15 Phenomenology and Contemporary Ethnomusicology
Harris M. Berger, Texas A&M University
4:00 – 5:30 pm
Roundtable –Ethical Tight Spots: How Ethnography Can Survive Institutional Requirements, Maintain Morality, and Still Say Something Relevant
Chairs: Patricia Vergara, University of Maryland, and Jordan Newman, University of Cincinnati
*Sponsored by the Student Union Section and Music and Violence Special Interest Group
David McDonald, Indiana University Bloomington
Jonathan Ritter, University of California, Riverside
Michael Birenbaum Quintero, Bowdoin College
Carol Babiracki, Syracuse University
Louise Meintjes, Duke University
Jason McCoy, Dallas Baptist University