Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Afterword

Howard, Keith

Authors

Keith Howard



Contributors

Barley Norton
Editor

Naomi Matsumoto
Editor

Abstract

Discourse on music as heritage has too often evaded the challenge of maintaining performance and creation, the factors that define artistic practice, and has instead concentrated on documentation, collecting, and archiving. Museums had or were establishing protocols to resist the increasing clamour for repatriation, arguing that when it came to preservation of the cultural heritage the West knew best. The still-life existence of preserved forms continues to sit uncomfortably, even if increasingly commonly, with contemporary developments, be they fusions of the local with popular music, avant-garde compositions, or reinterpretations of the local on urban stages and at festivals. The Convention took over from three proclamations of UNESCO Masterpieces in the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity. In retrospect, it was these that effectively tamed scholarly critique, because academics were employed both by local groups and state authorities to prepare submissions and were then commissioned by UNESCO, through its affiliated organizations, to evaluate these submissions.

Citation

Howard, K. (2018). Afterword. In B. Norton, & N. Matsumoto (Eds.), Music as Heritage: Historical and Ethnographic Perspectives (278-284). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315393865-14

Publication Date Jul 20, 2018
Deposit Date Jun 29, 2020
Publisher Routledge
Pages 278-284
Series Title SOAS Musicology Series
Book Title Music as Heritage: Historical and Ethnographic Perspectives
ISBN 9780367588137
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315393865-14



Downloadable Citations