Music
Music and Society - Year 1
Module code: W3066B
Level 4
15 credits in spring semester
Teaching method: Lecture, Seminar
Assessment modes: Coursework
Music does not exist in isolation from society. Many cultures in the world have no word for music conceived as an entity distinct from the contexts in which it takes place: contexts such as social or religious ritual, dance or performance. Only in modern western culture has the idea of art music as something autonomous and removed from the everyday world evolved.
Why is music meaningful to us, and how can we understand how music has meaning at all? What is the function of art music in cultures dominated by commercial values? How can we grasp the relationships between the multiplicity of musical forms that are available in a modern globalised culture? How can we evaluate the impact of the different media and technologies by which music is disseminated and consumed? These are some of the questions that this module looks to address.
You’ll look at different intellectual approaches to these questions and to broaden your engagement with the issues through independent research.
The module charts recent musical history both in terms of technical innovation, and social and aesthetic concerns of the composers involved. The aim of the module is to stimulate awareness of recent musical thinking and also to use that awareness to re-examine more conventional musical views and habits.
Module learning outcomes
- Undertake an in-depth analysis of a musical event, based on the model employed by Christopher Small in 'Musicking', relating a particular musical event and musical genre to wider historical and social contexts.
- Identify and describe a particular musical genre, and explain its social meanings and values.
- Engage with theoretical ideas concerning the relationship between music and society.
- Deploy primary and secondary research sources critically in support of an argument.