This looks to be a lively presentation of an important subject, and the best part is a short performance by the Pitt Gamelan afterward.
Pitt
to Host Dec. 4 Symposium on Cultural Rights
Music in a contentious debate concerning
international law and creative rights
PITTSBURGH—Today, music, as both a cultural practice and a
commercial product, is enmeshed in a contentious debate concerning international
law and the rights attached to individual creativity.
This controversy
will be examined at the University of Pittsburgh in a symposium on music and
cultural rights from 2 to 5 p.m. Dec. 4 in the Kurtzman Room of the William Pitt
Union, 3959 Fifth Ave., Oakland.
The symposium is a follow-up to an
April 2005 conference at Pitt that offered global and local perspectives on the
study of cultural rights through music. The papers presented at that conference
are chapters in Music and Cultural Rights (Univ. of Illinois Press,
2009), a new book coedited by Andrew Weintraub and Bell Yung, Pitt associate
professor and professor of music, respectively. The symposium celebrates the
publication of the book, which provides individual case studies that demonstrate
how musical aspects of cultural rights play out in the specific cultural
contexts of China, Hawaii, Peru, Brazil, and others.
According to
Weintraub and Yung, “cultural rights” refers to a group’s ability to preserve
its culture, raise its children in the ways of its forebears, continue to
communicate in its language, and not be deprived of its economic base by the
globalized environment in which it is located.
In addition to Weintraub
and Yung, the following experts are scheduled to speak:
•
Beverley Diamond, Canada Research Chair in Music and Ethnomusicology,
Memorial University of Newfoundland;
• Michael Madison,
professor of law, University of Pittsburgh; and
• Damien Pwono,
executive director, Global Initiative on Culture and Society,
The
Aspen Institute.
Following the presentations, there will be a 5
p.m. reception featuring music by members of the University of Pittsburgh
Gamelan Ensemble. In addition to Pitt’s music department, sponsors include
Pitt’s Asian Studies Center, Center for Latin American Studies, Center for
Russian and East European Studies, School of Law, and Office of the Dean of the
School of Arts and Sciences.
For more information, contact Andrew
Weintraub at anwein@pitt.edu or visit
www.ucis.pitt.edu/inpac/conferences/music.html
Posted
Nov 27 2009, 02:22 PM
by
Andrew Druckenbrod