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Sounding Spaces: Exploring Interactions Among Space, Place, Music and Identity in a Canadian Community Choi

Posted on:2018-01-01Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of Toronto (Canada)Candidate:Galway, Kiera MaryFull Text:PDF
GTID:1472390017492725Subject:Music Education
Abstract/Summary:
This dissertation, situated in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, is a musical geography and ethnography of Lady Cove Women's choir that explores interactions among music, identity, and place. In this study, I consider how choral musicians use music to negotiate individual and collective identities as they interact with material and conceptual spaces of music-making. Participant observation and interviews were used together with conceptual mapping and participant-led tours to explore the kinds of spaces musicians inhabit in the city; their subjective senses of space and place and differences of spatial knowledge and affective responses to space and place. The study enabled participants to connect musical experiences to their material environments and associated identities, memories, emotions and relationships.;I use Lefebvre (1974) and Massey (1992, 2005) to contextualize participant experiences in terms of urban change and in relation to theoretical approaches that highlight the relational nature of space. Like Massey (1994), I frame space and place in terms of social relations to consider questions of accessibility and spatial organization, discussing how spaces are marked by uneven patterns of ideology, power and wealth. Lefebvre's theory of space as socially produced and contingent informs my discussion of evolving senses of place in response to urban change, shifting demographics, new economic realities and natural resources.;The study revealed several key findings. First, it mapped how musicians move through urban space, revealing how routes are carved into the city over time and demonstrating genre-influenced patterns of visiting and re-visiting material music-making spaces like church buildings and arts centres. Second, analyzing the locations in participant tours illuminated what matters to participants and why, what made certain places distinctive or important for them and how these places changed over time. Finally, the diverse perspectives presented in participant narratives helped to highlight the multiple and relational nature of social space and offered opportunities to explore the ways in which locations of community music are animated by competing, sometimes conflicting discourses and spatial practices.
Keywords/Search Tags:Music, Space, Place
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