Aaron S. Allen is Director of the Environment & Sustainability
Program and Associate Professor of Musicology at UNC
Greensboro.
Jeff Todd Titon is Professor of Music, Emeritus, at Brown
University, where for many years he led the PhD program in
ethnomusicology.
Sounds, Ecologies, Musics constitutes an important step for
ecomusicology outside of music ecocriticism, enlisting cases of
transformative critical approaches that aim to cause significant
and lasting changes in the field of ecomusicology, and in music
studies more generally.
*Luca Gambirasio, Ethnomusicology Forum*
Sounds, Ecologies, Musics plays an important role in this ongoing
development of the field, and will no doubt find receptive readers
amongst those seeking to understand better how music and sound
studies might respond to global and interlinked crises. The volume
is particularly well-suited for teaching purposes, given the
self-contained and concise nature of each chapter.
*Rowan Bayliss Hawitt, Music & Letters*
Sounds, Ecologies, Musics plays an important role in this ongoing
development of the field, and will no doubt find receptive readers
amongst those seeking to understand better how music and sound
studies might respond to global and interlinked crises. The volume
is particularly well-suited for teaching purposes, given the
self-contained and concise nature of each chapter. It is also a
welcome (though only partial) corrective to the diminished space
afforded to environmen-tal justice and decolonial work in earlier
ecomu-sicology publications.
*Rowan Bayliss Hawitt, Music & Letters*
Sounds, Ecologies, Musics constitutes an important step for
ecomusicology outside of music ecocriticism, enlisting cases of
transformative critical approaches that aim to cause significantand
lasting changes in the field of ecomusicology, and in music studies
more generally.
*Luca Gambirasio, Ethnomusicology*
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