Meaningful Music, Unmediated Sound: An Evolutionary History
- ๐ค Speaker: Professor Elizabeth Tolbert, Johns Hopkins Peabody Institute ๐ Website
- ๐ Date & Time: Friday 22 January 2016, 18:00 - 19:15
- ๐ Venue: Wolfson College, Old Combination Room
Abstract
I suggest that the conditions of representation that allow for music to be apprehended as socially and emotionally meaningful are biologically grounded in our evolutionary history. Specifically, I propose that music emerged from the evolution of the human capacity for culture (Tomasello 1999, 2005), and is a means of creating joint attentions and intentions in order to achieve social goals. The evolution of a uniquely human form of social intelligence resulted in human symbolic systems such as music and language that give rise to an inherent phonocentrism (Derrida 1976), a perceived immediacy of vocally communicative sound. Although decades of ethnomusicological research have debunked the myth of musicโs literal unmediatedness, I maintain that the experience of musicโs immediacy, indeed the experienced immediacy of any symbolic communication, is what allows it to be intelligible in the first place.โ
Series This talk is part of the Wolfson College Science Society series.
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Friday 22 January 2016, 18:00-19:15