School for Studies in Art and Culture
Music
Loeb Building A911
Telephone: 520-5770
Fax: 520-3905
The School
St. Patrick's Building 423
Director: John Shepherd
Assistant Director (Music): Jennifer Giles
Music offers courses at the graduate level in musicology and ethnomusicology.
These include courses offered in cooperation with the School of
Canadian Studies. Full use is made of the resources of the National
Library, the Public Archives, and the National Museum of Civilization.
Dr. Elaine Keillor is lecturer in Canadian music with Dr. Helmut
Kallmann (former Chief Music Librarian, National Library) as Adjunct
Professor.
Courses in the sociology and aesthetics of music are offered by
Dr. John Shepherd and Dr. Geraldine Finn.
Graduate Courses*
- Music 30.501W1
Theories of Music as Culture
This course provides a critical survey of major theories on the
relationship between music and culture. Particular attention is
paid to the way in which work in musicology, ethnomusicology,
culture theory, feminism, semiotics, structuralism, poststructuralism,
and psychoanalytic theory has been applied to the problem of understanding
the culture-specific character of sound in music.
Prerequisite: Permission of the School for Studies in Art
and Culture (Music).
- Music 30.505F1
Feminism and Musicology
This course applies the insights and analyses of feminist cultural
critiques to the theory and practice of music and musicology.
Taking specific discursive and musical examples as its focus,
the course draws upon recent developments in psychoanalytic theory,
deconstruction and post-colonial critique to examine the structures
and significances of music in contemporary culture and its relationship
to politics, ideology and power.
Prerequisite: Permission of the School for Studies in Art
and Culture (Music).
- Music 30.510T2
History of Canadian Music I
Selected aspects of notated Canadian music from 1600 to the present;
liturgical music; social and economic conditions of Canadian musical
life; regional studies; individual composers and performers.
Prerequisite: Permission of the School for Studies in Art
and Culture (Music).
- Music 30.511F1
History of Canadian Music II
Anglo- and Franco-folk music traditions in Canada, past and present.
Prerequisite: Permission of the School for Studies in Art
and Culture (Music).
- Music 30.512W1
History of Canadian Music III
The music of various ethnic minorities in Canada with special
emphasis on the traditions of the First Nations.
Prerequisite: Permission of the School for Studies in Art
and Culture (Music).
- Music 30.515F1
History of Canadian Music IV
A survey of the history of French-Canadian popular music from
the beginnings of Nouvelle France to the present. Topics to be
covered include folk music of the seventeenth, eighteenth, and
nineteenth centuries, salon music, political song, and the growth
of mass disseminated popular music. Special attention is paid
to the social and political contexts of music making, in particular
the identity of popular music with aspirations of nationalism
in the Province of Québec during the 1950s, 1960s, and
1970s.
Prerequisites: Permission of the School for Studies in
Art and Culture (Music). A good reading ability in French is essential.