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Decolonizing (South) Africa Music (Studies)

Class at Faculty of Arts |
AHV030000

Syllabus

Subject to minor changes/adjustments during the semester.

For detailed syllabus for every class check MS Teams.   21 Feb - So what does it mean to decolonize African music?

Ndaliko 2021   28 Feb - Decolonizing knowledge from "the global south"

Mbembe 2015 / Camaroff and Comaroff 2009 / Mignolo 2009

Audio/video: Desai 2018 / Kaganof 2016   6 March - Decolonizing music studies. Is it possible?

Venter et al. 2018

Audio/video: Kaganof 2014   13 March - "African music", "African rhythm" and tonality in Africa

Agawu 1995, 2016, 2008 / Pooley 2018

Audio/video: Agawu's lectures   20 March - Sheet music - white music? On South African choral music

Lucia 2008, 2011, 2014

Audio/video: African Composers Edition   27 March - Composing African music (for string quartet)

Koapeng 2014 / Volans n. d., 1986 / Biko 2002 (1978)

Audio/video: The Bow Project / Volans 1981, 1982, 1986   3 April - Opera in Cape Town, white but not quite

Roos 2018 / Pistorius 2017, 2019

Audio/video: Kaganof 2013   10 April - Jazz against segregation and apartheid

Ballantine 2012 (1993) / Allen 2002 / Dalamba 2018

Audio/video: Ballantine 2012 / Rogosin 1959   17 April - Whose jazz? Jazz historiography from South Africa

Muller 2007, 2011 / Dalamba 2019 / Ramanna 2016

Audio/video: Yon 2010   24 April - Aestehtics of freedom in South African electronic music

Steingo 2016

Audio/video: Kaganof 2003   1 May - No class, public holidays in the Czech Republic   8 May - No class, public holidays in the Czech Republic   15 May - Final discussion  

Presentation of the final paper's material and main arguments is going to take place during the exam period. The date will be announced upon mutual agreement.

Annotation

Wednesday 15:50 - 17:20 (February 21 - May 15).

Those of you who are going to attend the course physically, please note that it takes place in the Klementinum building of the National Library, room number 230. If you are not a registered user of the National Library already, please do - for a friendly price - register in order to get to the course's venue physically (does not apply to online participants). As a bonus, besides access to millions of books and the library's premises, you will be able to use a number of online academic and non-academic music databases, including the ones providing streaming of rare music recordings.

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There are two possible readings of the course title. One reads Decolonizing African Music, the other Decolonizing South African Music Studies. The first suggests general field of interest, the other including the bracketed words reminds us, first, that there always already is a more or less sophisticated understanding (the ‘Studies’ part) before we even begin to listen, that there is no music per se, no sound ever without meaning and, second, that we can’t stereotypically speak about essentialized ‘Africa’ or ‘African music’ but need focus (‘South’ as a case study here).

Why do we need to decolonize our thinking about African music? Because, as any other cultural practice, it is inevitably situated. It is us listening through our complex historical experience, always listening ‘from somewhere’. In our case, this somewhere happens to be Europe, Central and Eastern Europe in particular, with its direct or less direct past and to some extent presence shaped under the conditions of coloniality. Our aesthetic experience of African performing arts as listeners and spectators is inevitably steeped in aural and visual colonial imagination. The language we speak, its structures and words we use too need to be laboured against the grain - to be re-invented anew and to make us better informed and more attentive ears of the world.

The course work is based on class discussions of prescribed reading, listening and watching. The students are asked to submit regular short written reaction papers and a longer final paper by the end of the semester, and to present (live or pre-recorded) the paper’s material and main arguments during final presentation in the exam period.

The course will be taught in English in a hybrid form open to students of the Charles University and other universities via the virtual mobility scheme. The whole course is accessible virtually via MS Teams (lectures, seminars, materials, examination, presentation etc.). As part of the virtual mobility scheme, the course belongs to the flagship 2, Europeanness: multilingualism, pluralities, citizenship, developing especially the transversal skill 3 – critical thinking about Europeanness as a relational notion evolved in historical entanglement with coloniality.