Repatriating childhood: issues in the ethical return of Venda children's musical materials from the archival collection of John Blacking
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Open Access
Type
Book chapterAuthor/s
Emberly, AndreaAbstract
In ethnomusicological research, children are often conceptualised as the next generation of culture bearers who must be entrusted with valuable cultural materials to be sustained into the future. This conception, whether from cultural insiders, invested outsiders, or those in-between, often positions childhood as a place for re-embedding so called ‘endangered musical traditions’. Understanding children as the next generation of culture bearers informs the ways we approach the research process surrounding the documentation, archiving, and repatriation of musical cultures.In ethnomusicological research, children are often conceptualised as the next generation of culture bearers who must be entrusted with valuable cultural materials to be sustained into the future. This conception, whether from cultural insiders, invested outsiders, or those in-between, often positions childhood as a place for re-embedding so called ‘endangered musical traditions’. Understanding children as the next generation of culture bearers informs the ways we approach the research process surrounding the documentation, archiving, and repatriation of musical cultures.
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Date
2015-01-01Publisher
Sydney University PressLicence
Copyright Sydney University PressCitation
Emberly, A. (2015). Repatriating childhood: issues in the ethical return of Venda children's musical materials from the archival collection of John Blacking. In A. Harris, N. Thieberger & L. Barwick (Eds.) 'Research, records and responsibility: ten years of PARADISEC' (pp. 163-186). Sydney: Sydney University Press.Share