Towards a Decolonial Pedagogy: African Music and Dance Performance in the American Academy
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Virtual MiddleburyOpen to the Public

Presenter: Dr. Dr. Damascus Kafumbe, Associate Professor of Music
When students enroll in world music performance courses, they typically enter them carrying certain stereotypes, biases, and expectations that distort the learning process. Perhaps the most common of such misconceptions is that all musical knowledge and skills can and should be transmitted primarily through Euro-American pedagogical methods such as written notation, individualized instruction, and codified theory. This presentation makes a case for musical pedagogy that utilizes the cultural principles that inform the artistic styles being taught as frameworks for instruction. Drawing on two decades of experience teaching African music and dance performance in the American academy, the talk demonstrates this approach’s efficacy through recorded performances, exemplary quotes from student reflections, and my analysis of these materials. The presentation is part of a larger project (teaching guide) that contributes to ongoing discourses about effective pedagogy. Sponsored by midd.data.
Please register here.
- Sponsored by:
- College Libraries
Contact Organizer
Roy, Michael
mdroy@middlebury.edu
(802) 443-5490