Scarecrow Press
Pages: 160
Trim: 5¾ x 8¾
978-0-8108-4122-2 • Hardback • March 2002 • $63.00 • (£48.00)
978-1-4616-7062-9 • eBook • March 2002 • $59.50 • (£46.00)
Andy H. Nercessian is currently lecturer in ethnomusicology at the University of Durham, UK.
Part 1 Part 1: Preliminaries
Part 2 Part 2: Postmodernism and Its Position in the Western Intellectual Tradition
Part 3 Part 3: The Postmodern in Music: An Examination of the Role of Meaning and Culture in Music
Part 4 Part 4: Concluding Remarks
Nercessian (music, U. of Cambridge, UK) explores how certain assumptions of postmodernism evident in the work of ethnomusicologists are contradicted by the experience of world music. The idea that music is capable of producing many meanings and that the meanings are dependent on context is contradicted, says Nercessian, by the observation that music changes meanings for listeners within a culture perhaps as much as between cultures.
— 2002; Reference and Research Book News
This wonderful, lucidly written book invites us to think about music, above all in connection with recent attitudes toward "world music," in a less doctrinaire and ethnically constricted way. Nercessian, unlike so many others, celebrates what we have in common as listeners, not what separates us. His book deserves a wide reading; it could make a real difference in the way we think about the nature of music in our time.
— Robert Morgan, professor of music, Yale University