SCHEDULE*
*Download the full conference program at the bottom of this page.
9:30 - 10am Breakfast and Coffee
10 – 11:30am Panel 1: Memory as Practice, moderated by Prof. Walter Frisch (Columbia University)
Mackenzie Pierce (Cornell) "Practicing Memory: Associationist Psychology and Memorized Pianistic Performance"
Sara Ballance (UC Santa Barbara) "Remembering Notes, Forgetting History: Musical Dictation as a Historical Practice"
Rachel Wishkoski (Ohio State) "To Become Something New Yet Familiar”: Body Memory, Curatorial Moves, and ‘Re- membering’ in Seattle Buddhist Church’s Bon Odori Festival"
11:30am - 1pm Panel 2: Collective Memory, moderated by Jessica Schwartz, Ph.D. (Columbia University)
Jennie Gubner (UCLA) "The Tango of Lampposts, Cobblestone Streets, and the neighborhoods of tomorrow: Evoking the past to shape the present in the neighborhood tango bar scenes of Buenos Aires"
Teresita Lozano (University of Colorado, Boulder) "'¡Que Viva Cristo Rey!:' Mexican Cristero Corridos as Sources of Oral Historiography and Memory of the Post-Revolutionary Cristero Wars"
Nate Renner (University of Toronto) "Recorded Music, Affect and Collective Memory in Movements for Ainu Cultural Revival"
1 - 2:30pm Lunch
2:30 - 4pm Panel 3: Memorial Economies, moderated by Prof. Benjamin Steege (Columbia University)
Torbjorn Ottersen (University of Cambridge) "Requiem for a dead city: Rudolf Mauersberger and the Dresden bombings"
Michael W. Harris, Ph.D. (University of Colorado, Boulder) "'Lost in a Memory:' Music as Mnemon in Cowboy Bebop"
Anthony Cushing, Ph.D. (University of Western Ontario) "These were my Ideas of North: Memory and Recollection as Delineator of Form and Texture in Glenn Gould’s The Idea of North"
4 - 4:15pm Coffee Break
4:15 – 5:15pm Keynote Speaker Jonathan Sterne (McGill University) "The Sterephonic World of Soundscape"
5:15 – 6pm Closing Remarks and Reception
You may download the full conference program here:
9:30 - 10am Breakfast and Coffee
10 – 11:30am Panel 1: Memory as Practice, moderated by Prof. Walter Frisch (Columbia University)
Mackenzie Pierce (Cornell) "Practicing Memory: Associationist Psychology and Memorized Pianistic Performance"
Sara Ballance (UC Santa Barbara) "Remembering Notes, Forgetting History: Musical Dictation as a Historical Practice"
Rachel Wishkoski (Ohio State) "To Become Something New Yet Familiar”: Body Memory, Curatorial Moves, and ‘Re- membering’ in Seattle Buddhist Church’s Bon Odori Festival"
11:30am - 1pm Panel 2: Collective Memory, moderated by Jessica Schwartz, Ph.D. (Columbia University)
Jennie Gubner (UCLA) "The Tango of Lampposts, Cobblestone Streets, and the neighborhoods of tomorrow: Evoking the past to shape the present in the neighborhood tango bar scenes of Buenos Aires"
Teresita Lozano (University of Colorado, Boulder) "'¡Que Viva Cristo Rey!:' Mexican Cristero Corridos as Sources of Oral Historiography and Memory of the Post-Revolutionary Cristero Wars"
Nate Renner (University of Toronto) "Recorded Music, Affect and Collective Memory in Movements for Ainu Cultural Revival"
1 - 2:30pm Lunch
2:30 - 4pm Panel 3: Memorial Economies, moderated by Prof. Benjamin Steege (Columbia University)
Torbjorn Ottersen (University of Cambridge) "Requiem for a dead city: Rudolf Mauersberger and the Dresden bombings"
Michael W. Harris, Ph.D. (University of Colorado, Boulder) "'Lost in a Memory:' Music as Mnemon in Cowboy Bebop"
Anthony Cushing, Ph.D. (University of Western Ontario) "These were my Ideas of North: Memory and Recollection as Delineator of Form and Texture in Glenn Gould’s The Idea of North"
4 - 4:15pm Coffee Break
4:15 – 5:15pm Keynote Speaker Jonathan Sterne (McGill University) "The Sterephonic World of Soundscape"
5:15 – 6pm Closing Remarks and Reception
You may download the full conference program here:

cmsc_conference_program.pdf | |
File Size: | 210 kb |
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