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UID:490e38e6944aa1f1cbf67d8dbd7ddf33
CATEGORIES:Séminaire du CREM, CREM
CREATED:20220711T110537
SUMMARY:Cosmologies of musical health practices
LOCATION:Lesc – salle 308F (3e étage) - 21\, allée de l’Université\, Nanterre\, \, 9
 2000\, France
DESCRIPTION:With Bernd Brabec de Mori*\nFrom ritual practices among Indigenous people t
 o clinical music therapy in post-industrial contexts, the investigation int
 o the effects and impacts of sound and music on wellbeing constitutes a bur
 geoning area of scholarly inquiry. Studies in music psychology and clinical
  music therapy isolate specific musical techniques and sounds in laboratory
  and clinical contexts, while ethnomusicological and anthropological invest
 igations contextualise sound and music, seeing them as integral parts of sp
 ecific societies and their respective worldviews and constructions of meani
 ng. However, the specific relationship between the practical applications o
 f sound and music and the metaphysical experiences and manifestations assoc
 iated with corresponding health practices, has hitherto received little att
 ention, especially in contemporary Central European contexts of music thera
 py and sound healing.\nBased on a series of interviews and participant obse
 rvation among musical health practitioners, I will present some preliminary
  findings on their ontological constructions of musical efficacy: which ent
 ities do exist in the musical universe, how are these conceived and interac
 ted with, and how can they be talked about in a modern European language. T
 hese preliminary findings will be put into relation with work in the ontolo
 gy of sound and listening, as well as with Indigenous cosmological construc
 tions of musical efficacy. Thus, a contextualization of modern Central Euro
 pean concepts among concepts from different parts of the world can be envis
 ioned and will be discussed.\n* Bernd Brabec de Mori received his PhD in mu
 sicology from the University of Vienna. He has been working for five years 
 in the field among Indigenous People in the Peruvian lowland rainforests. A
 fter returning to Europe in 2006, he has been teaching and researching, amo
 ng other institutions, at the Phonogrammarchiv of the Austrian Academy of S
 ciences, at the department for social and cultural anthropology at Philipps
 -University Marburg, at the centre for systematic musicology of Karl-Franze
 ns-University Graz. Currently he holds a tenure track position at the Unive
 rsity of Innsbruck, Austria. He published a couple of books, among them Die
  Lieder der Richtigen Menschen [Songs of the Real People] (2015), Sudaméric
 a y sus mundos audibles [South America and its auditory worlds] (2015), and
  Auditive Wissenskulturen [Auditory knowledge cultures] (2018), as well as 
 research articles in the areas of Indigenous vocal music, medical ethnomusi
 cology, sound perception, and auditory knowledge. \nORCID:0000-0002-2150-49
 24\n
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<img src="https://www.lesc-cnrs.fr/images/vstoichita/SeminaireCREM_2022_Bra
 becDeMori.jpeg" width="300" height="240" alt="Rembrandt van Rijn, &quot;Sau
 l and David&quot;, oil on canvas, ca 1655." style="margin-right: 10px; marg
 in-bottom: 10px; float: left;" title="Rembrandt van Rijn, &quot;Saul and Da
 vid&quot;, oil on canvas, ca 1655." /><p><strong>With Bernd Brabec de Mori<
 /strong>*</p><p>From ritual practices among Indigenous people to clinical m
 usic therapy in post-industrial contexts, the investigation into the effect
 s and impacts of sound and music on wellbeing constitutes a burgeoning area
  of scholarly inquiry. Studies in music psychology and clinical music thera
 py isolate specific musical techniques and sounds in laboratory and clinica
 l contexts, while ethnomusicological and anthropological investigations con
 textualise sound and music, seeing them as integral parts of specific socie
 ties and their respective worldviews and constructions of meaning. However,
  the specific relationship between the practical applications of sound and 
 music and the metaphysical experiences and manifestations associated with c
 orresponding health practices, has hitherto received little attention, espe
 cially in contemporary Central European contexts of music therapy and sound
  healing.</p><p>Based on a series of interviews and participant observation
  among musical health practitioners, I will present some preliminary findin
 gs on their ontological constructions of musical efficacy: which entities d
 o exist in the musical universe, how are these conceived and interacted wit
 h, and how can they be talked about in a modern European language. These pr
 eliminary findings will be put into relation with work in the ontology of s
 ound and listening, as well as with Indigenous cosmological constructions o
 f musical efficacy. Thus, a contextualization of modern Central European co
 ncepts among concepts from different parts of the world can be envisioned a
 nd will be discussed.</p><p>* Bernd Brabec de Mori received his PhD in musi
 cology from the University of Vienna. He has been working for five years in
  the field among Indigenous People in the Peruvian lowland rainforests. Aft
 er returning to Europe in 2006, he has been teaching and researching, among
  other institutions, at the Phonogrammarchiv of the Austrian Academy of Sci
 ences, at the department for social and cultural anthropology at Philipps-U
 niversity Marburg, at the centre for systematic musicology of Karl-Franzens
 -University Graz. Currently he holds a tenure track position at the Univers
 ity of Innsbruck, Austria. He published a couple of books, among them <i>Di
 e Lieder der Richtigen Menschen [Songs of the Real People] </i>(2015), Suda
 mérica y sus mundos audibles [South America and its auditory worlds] (2015)
 , and <i>Auditive Wissenskulturen [Auditory knowledge cultures] </i>(2018),
  as well as research articles in the areas of Indigenous vocal music, medic
 al ethnomusicology, sound perception, and auditory knowledge.&nbsp;</p><p>O
 RCID:0000-0002-2150-4924</p>
DTSTAMP:20260531T133049
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20220919T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20220919T120000
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