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Markus Tullberg. Photographer: Michel Thomas.

Markus Tullberg

Lecturer

Markus Tullberg. Photographer: Michel Thomas.

Playing with tradition in communities of Swedish folk music : Negotiations of meaning in instrumental music tuition

Author

  • Markus Tullberg
  • Eva Sæther

Summary, in English

The present article explores meaning in relation to musical learning. One starting point is the assumption that a meaningful music education is strongly related to the social domain of music-making. The aim of this article is to provide analytical tools to understand how meaning is negotiated within instrumental music tuition. Our interest lies in formal higher music education, an arena where the social dimension tends to be rather obscure, in contrast to the genre of Swedish folk music, which is our empirical context. There is a strong case for revaluing the social dimension in the study and creation of a meaningful music education. In line with this, our analytical framework draws primarily upon theories of situated cognition, situated learning, and communities of practice. In particular, our analytical focus is negotiations of meaning, which are understood as constituted by two reciprocal processes of participation and reification. Meaning negotiation can be defined as a process that is incomplete, ongoing, and open-ended. Since negotiations of meaning refer to a larger picture, they become a useful point of interest in understanding the dynamics between a single learning situation, the educational framing, and the wider musical world of the learner. We exemplify how this analytical perspective can be applied by referring to our ongoing research project, which investigates trajectories of learning within different communities of Swedish folk music. We focus on two analytical nodes that have bearing across the communities and serve as locus points for ongoing meaning negotiations: (i) the identity of spelman and (ii) the approach to notation. With these two examples, we hope to show the potential of the framework. We also present methodological considerations that come from applying the proposed analytical tools in our study. Using an ethnographic approach, we lean toward the ideas of “messy research,” musical research sensibilities, and stepwise-deductive induction. In the final section of the article, we elaborate on the educational implications that follow from a perspective that takes meaning as its point of departure.

Department/s

  • Teachers (Malmö Academy of Music)

Publishing year

2022-12-08

Language

English

Publication/Series

Frontiers in Education

Volume

7

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Frontiers Media S. A.

Topic

  • Music
  • Pedagogy

Keywords

  • communities of practice
  • competencies
  • identities
  • instrumental education
  • meaningful
  • messy research
  • music education
  • Swedish folk music

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 2504-284X