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DTSTAMP:20260518T023543
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UID:4456-1667638800-1667667600@artsalliancedavis.org
SUMMARY:UC Davis Music: Rethinking the History of Indonesian Music
DESCRIPTION:This Nov. 5 conference features presentations from scholars that explore topics of colonialism\, indigeneity\, evolving artistry\, and the rethinking of Indonesian history. \n\nFree to attend and lunch provided for those that pre-register for the conference. Please submit your registration by Thur.\, Nov. 3rd.\nFor those unable to attend\, UC Davis Music will livestream the conference beginning at 9:20 am. Please note that interaction is not possible over the livestream.\n\nAbout the Conference\nEight scholars will present 30-minute papers\, followed by 10-minute prepared responses from local respondents\, on topics related to the broad subject of music history in the geographical area currently identified as the Indonesian archipelago. The conference is part of a broader Luce Foundation project titled “Toward a Music History of the Indonesian Archipelago\,” which will take place over two years. With this open approach\, the conference seeks to explore topics of indigeneity\, colonialism\, the evolving artistry of modern gamelan\, and the rethinking of Indonesian history. \nPreceding the conference\, the Bay Area’s rock-gamelan fusion group Purnamasari will give a concert Friday\, Nov. 4\, at 7 pm in the Ann E. Pitzer Center. \nVisit the page on the UC Davis Music website for the conference schedule. \nAbout the Luce Foundation Project\nStarting in the 16th century and continuing until World War II\, Christian missionaries to the Indonesian archipelago took an interest in indigenous music. Up until now\, the source materials have been difficult to find\, scattered and ignored. But UC Davis professors Henry Spiller and Anna Maria Busse Berger have received a major grant from the Henry Luce Foundation’s Asia Program to investigate these sources and make these materials more accessible. \n“It has been ignored because it was collected by missionaries and considered biased\,” Spiller says\, “but that’s throwing out the baby with the bathwater. We’re not trying to redeem the missionaries\, but to make the priceless information they collected available to all interested parties.” \nThe professors will focus primarily on work done by Dutch and German missionaries in the late 19th and early 20th centuries\, although there are reports by Portuguese Jesuit missionaries dating to the 16th century. \nThe award to the College of Letters and Science’s Department of Music professors provides funding for research\, two conferences\, and a post-doctoral fellowship\, which has been filled by Dr. Dustin Wiebe. \nMost European missionaries were trained to learn about the languages of the places they were posted\, and as an outgrowth of that\, some began documenting music. This was boosted with the founding in 1900 of the Berlin Phonogramm-Archiv\, which provided sound recording equipment and training to missionaries and travelers. \nThe Henry Luce Foundation seeks to enrich public discourse by promoting innovative scholarship\, cultivating new leaders\, and fostering international understanding.
URL:https://artsalliancedavis.org/event/uc-davis-music-rethinking-the-history-of-indonesian-music/
LOCATION:Ann E. Pitzer Center\, Ann E. Pitzer Center UC Davis Campus\, 754-2787
CATEGORIES:Community,Music
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20221113T160000
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CREATED:20221103T231142Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221103T231142Z
UID:4532-1668355200-1668355200@artsalliancedavis.org
SUMMARY:Seeds of Justice: How Manifest Destiny Changed the Color of Labor
DESCRIPTION:Attend the third virtual lecture in the Seeds of Justice series at the Episcopal Church of St. Martin on Sunday\, Nov. 13 @ 4p. \nRegister in advance for the event here: [https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0sdOmgpjssH9wZg6WMbo4T4J2UN9_7vECh]\nManifest Destiny as a doctrine of white expansion ironically required the introduction of more people of color into the United States. The shortage of white labor on the Pacific Coast and Hawaii to build the region’s economy required the serial recruitment of labor from Asia from the 1850s to the 1930s. This was followed by the primary reliance on Mexican labor until post-WWII. Immigrant labor was crucial in the development of mining\, transportation\, industry\, and agriculture. Exploitation of this labor laid not only the foundations of U.S. immigration law but also complicated the binary white/black racial classification\, both locally and nationally. \nThe goals of our Land-Based Ministry are in keeping with three of the primary mission priorities of the Episcopal Church: racial reconciliation\, evangelism\, and creation care. As such\, in addition to the education series\, we will continue to introduce activities and practices that cultivate and enrich both the soil and the community. \nThe talk will be led by John M. Liu\, Professor Emeritus in Depts. of Asian American Studies and Sociology at UC Irvine.
URL:https://artsalliancedavis.org/event/seeds-of-justice-how-manifest-destiny-changed-the-color-of-labor/
LOCATION:Online via Zoom
CATEGORIES:Community,Miscellaneous
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ORGANIZER;CN="The Episcopal Church of St. Martin":MAILTO:jan@churchofstmartin.org
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