Difference between revisions of "Book The Voice As A Mode Of Cultural Expression In Bali"
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|Author=Richard Herman Wallis, | |Author=Richard Herman Wallis, | ||
|Subject=music, poetry, sloka, kakawin, kidung, vocal, | |Subject=music, poetry, sloka, kakawin, kidung, vocal, | ||
+ | |Linked words=Kidung, Kakawin, | ||
|Description text="The central premise of this study is the interdependence of text, musical features, and cultural context in vocal practices of the Balinese people. Research conclusions suggest that uses of the voice in Bali carry meanings and values which are more than merely textual or musical. In fact, important cultural concepts may be expressed through the carefully prescribed systems for singing Balinese poetry. These concepts, in turn, tell us much about the way people structure their perceptions of experience. Beginning the study are chapters on the cultural, linguistic, and literary history of Bali and on the subject of music (vocal contrasted with instrumental) in the island's culture. Analysis of vocal genres then is restricted to three types of poetry, in current use, that reflect both Indian and Javanese influences in Bali's history: sloka, kakawin, and kidung. Based on data collected and recorded in the field, these analyses account for textual, musical, and functional/contextual features of the singing of poetry. Concluding the dissertation is a proposed model for the study of Balinese vocal practices. This is a model which compares and contrasts the following elements observable in any culturally prescribed use of the voice: literary genre, language, musical features, performance context, and conceptual values. It is suggested that this type of theoretical model can aid in our understanding not only other genres of Balinese vocal music but also such cultural systems as dance, drama, and religion. In such ways, the underlying patterns of this culture may be understood from an investigation of certain modes of expressive behavior." | |Description text="The central premise of this study is the interdependence of text, musical features, and cultural context in vocal practices of the Balinese people. Research conclusions suggest that uses of the voice in Bali carry meanings and values which are more than merely textual or musical. In fact, important cultural concepts may be expressed through the carefully prescribed systems for singing Balinese poetry. These concepts, in turn, tell us much about the way people structure their perceptions of experience. Beginning the study are chapters on the cultural, linguistic, and literary history of Bali and on the subject of music (vocal contrasted with instrumental) in the island's culture. Analysis of vocal genres then is restricted to three types of poetry, in current use, that reflect both Indian and Javanese influences in Bali's history: sloka, kakawin, and kidung. Based on data collected and recorded in the field, these analyses account for textual, musical, and functional/contextual features of the singing of poetry. Concluding the dissertation is a proposed model for the study of Balinese vocal practices. This is a model which compares and contrasts the following elements observable in any culturally prescribed use of the voice: literary genre, language, musical features, performance context, and conceptual values. It is suggested that this type of theoretical model can aid in our understanding not only other genres of Balinese vocal music but also such cultural systems as dance, drama, and religion. In such ways, the underlying patterns of this culture may be understood from an investigation of certain modes of expressive behavior." | ||
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Revision as of 06:34, 20 September 2019
- Title
- The Voice As A Mode Of Cultural Expression In Bali
- Original language
- Author(s)
- Illustrator(s)
- Publisher
- PhD Dissertation, University of Michigan
- ISBN
- —
- Publication date
- January 1980
- Subjects
- music
- poetry
- sloka
- kakawin
- kidung
- vocal
- Find Book
- Researchgate.net
- Related Env. Initiatives
- Related Places
- Related Biographies
- Related Children's Books
- Related Holidays
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- Linked words
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