Prerequisites

It is a requirement that the PhD candidate has acquired prerequisite knowledge within performing/creative music, musicology, music education or the equivalent at master’s level. Candidates with a master’s degree in cross-aesthetic study programmes (aesthetics, arts subjects and so on) must be able to document relevant subject-specific in-depth knowledge in music equivalent to at least 30 credits at master’s level.

Recommended prerequisites

A mixed educational background with academic, performing/creative and didactic components will be an advantage, but this is not a formal requirement.

Course contents

Music in Context presents how music enters into a range of different contexts. The course focuses on musical production, interpretation, communication, reception and the transformation of meaning.

 

Questions about music’s application in cross-aesthetic settings, in different contexts, and with different purposes, as well as the relationship between “artist”, “work”, and “audience” are addressed in a critical fashion. An introduction to the relational character of music is studied with regard to new points of access to practice and the interpretation of musical practice. The course takes as its point of departure concrete questions which are put forward in the candidates’ PhD projects and recent musicological theory.

Learning outcomes

After completing the course, candidates shall be able to reflect of musical practice from an arts subject, social and aesthetic perspective. The candidate shall be able to carry out research work at the point of meeting between these perspectives, and exercise critical and innovative thinking. The candidate shall be able to communicate his/her knowledge and understanding in different settings.

Examination requirements

  • The candidates shall hold a prepared oral presentation of the outline at one of the gatherings.

  • The candidates shall provide a prepared commentary to another PhD candidate’s presentation during the course.

  • The candidate shall submit a synopsis of c. 5 pages, plus complete references and literature, at the latest one week before the examination presentation.

Teaching methods

The teaching will be organised into two to four gatherings with lectures, seminars or workshops at which papers or artistic works will be presented and commented upon by the participants. The course will, to as large a degree as possible, be tailored to the candidates’ PhD projects. This applies not only to content, but also to working forms.

Evaluation

The person responsible for the course, in consultation with the student representative, decides the method of evaluation and whether the courses will have a midterm- or end of term evaluation, see also the Quality System, section 4.1. Information about evaluation method for the course will be posted on Canvas.

Offered as Single Standing Module

Yes.

Assessment methods and criteria

The candidates shall present an oral piece lasting c. 30 minutes. Of this, c. 15 minutes will be set aside to dialogue with the examination committee.

 

The presentation and synopsis are to be assessed by the individual with course responsibility and an external examiner. If the examination is assessed as a fail, a reason will be provided for this, as well as advice regarding improvements and a new date for the presentation.

 

Assessed with the grade: pass/fail.

Last updated from FS (Common Student System) June 30, 2024 11:37:29 PM