|
The flagship VMC Study Abroad faculty-led course is Dr Smith's seminar "Music, Folklore, and Tradition in Irish Cultural History", offered annually in the Spring semester since 2006, and including a two-week Maymester field-trip to Connacht in the West of Ireland.
The course has become a "workshop" in international study, providing many TTU students their first Study Abroad experiences and enhancing Dr Smith's international collaborations. |
View Ireland Seminar Spring 2012 in a larger map (Interactive map of 2012 Itinerary)
|
Dr Smith's "Ireland" seminar & field trip
Music, Folklore & Tradition in Irish Cultural History (MUHL4300-003/MUHL5320-003)
Course Facebook group: http://on.fb.me/ty2ybP
This seminar is an intensive, topics-oriented survey of the styles, practices, and cultures of music and oral tradition in Ireland since St. Patrick. Drawing on lectures, reading, listening, audio/visual sources, in-class performances, and individual research, this course provides students with an enhanced learning experience combining approaches from folklore, ethnomusicology, cultural and literary history, performance studies, anthropology, geography, and more.
Exploring the interaction between music and other aspects of cultural expression—talking, reading, listening, playing, and singing together—we will discover Irish influences from and to the other Celtic nations and to global communities; the interaction of morality, memory, texts, music, dance, and the sacred; and the impact of the Irish Diaspora on music and culture worldwide.
Tracing the Irish tradition’s histories, influences, and modern permutations, and examining them on recordings, video, and in live performance, we will expand our own artistic and intellectual insight and cross-cultural sophistication. Our theme will be the complex combinations of social, historical, political, colonial, economic, biographical, and artistic factors which have shaped Irish culture and identity over the last two millennia.
Intersession study abroad: A final component will be a spring intersession trip to the West of Ireland, May 20-June 4, during which Dr Smith will lead day trips, musical expeditions, and roaming seminars on music, folklore, and cultural history in the Irish countryside. Participation in this trip is a mandatory part of the course and Study Abroad scholarship assistance is available.
Meets TR 9:30-10:50am M268 School of Music.
Open to undergrads and grad students from across the TTU campus. Permission of instructor required. Fulfills upper-level Music History requirement for music majors.
Requirements include mid-term and final essay exams, a research or creative project, attendance, and participation.
Cost of the trip, which includes air-fare, accommodations, all transport (coach, ferries, rental vehicles, etc), all event fees and tickets, and 1 meal per day, is estimated at $3300 maximum. This cost is assessed as a course fee (like a lab fee) by SBS and can be paid using financial or other monies. Any surplus not spent on the trip is returned to students during the course of the trip.
Additional funding is available through the Study Abroad Competitive Scholarship (deadline Jan 10 2012), applications for which we can help coach.
Priority for enrollment in the course is given to (1) graduating seniors and graduate students and (2) music majors.
Course Facebook group: http://on.fb.me/ty2ybP
This seminar is an intensive, topics-oriented survey of the styles, practices, and cultures of music and oral tradition in Ireland since St. Patrick. Drawing on lectures, reading, listening, audio/visual sources, in-class performances, and individual research, this course provides students with an enhanced learning experience combining approaches from folklore, ethnomusicology, cultural and literary history, performance studies, anthropology, geography, and more.
Exploring the interaction between music and other aspects of cultural expression—talking, reading, listening, playing, and singing together—we will discover Irish influences from and to the other Celtic nations and to global communities; the interaction of morality, memory, texts, music, dance, and the sacred; and the impact of the Irish Diaspora on music and culture worldwide.
Tracing the Irish tradition’s histories, influences, and modern permutations, and examining them on recordings, video, and in live performance, we will expand our own artistic and intellectual insight and cross-cultural sophistication. Our theme will be the complex combinations of social, historical, political, colonial, economic, biographical, and artistic factors which have shaped Irish culture and identity over the last two millennia.
Intersession study abroad: A final component will be a spring intersession trip to the West of Ireland, May 20-June 4, during which Dr Smith will lead day trips, musical expeditions, and roaming seminars on music, folklore, and cultural history in the Irish countryside. Participation in this trip is a mandatory part of the course and Study Abroad scholarship assistance is available.
Meets TR 9:30-10:50am M268 School of Music.
Open to undergrads and grad students from across the TTU campus. Permission of instructor required. Fulfills upper-level Music History requirement for music majors.
Requirements include mid-term and final essay exams, a research or creative project, attendance, and participation.
Cost of the trip, which includes air-fare, accommodations, all transport (coach, ferries, rental vehicles, etc), all event fees and tickets, and 1 meal per day, is estimated at $3300 maximum. This cost is assessed as a course fee (like a lab fee) by SBS and can be paid using financial or other monies. Any surplus not spent on the trip is returned to students during the course of the trip.
Additional funding is available through the Study Abroad Competitive Scholarship (deadline Jan 10 2012), applications for which we can help coach.
Priority for enrollment in the course is given to (1) graduating seniors and graduate students and (2) music majors.
