Families as small-community quarantine pods of sociomusical engagement

Pub Date : 2022-07-01 DOI:10.1386/ijcm_00060_1
L. Dahm, Jack Flesher, Juliana Cantarelli Vita, P. Campbell
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This article considers the musical lives of eleven US-based families, micro-communities of sorts, as they were affected by the COVID-19 pandemic and associated physical isolation directives. With a focus on family pods as sites and sources of community, we employed processes of virtual ethnography including interviews, observations and the distribution of cameras to help empower participants, especially the children, to become active collaborators in a research study called Project COPE. Families indicated that musical practices during this time of learning, listening, moving and creating with instruments, voices and one another served a variety of purposes. These included self-regulation, identity formation, transmission, social cohesion, emotional bonding, embodied communication, well-being and a recognition of communal music expression as a human need. We note that in some cases, this rupture has been an opportunity for refocusing, reworking and re-envisioning in ways that impact community music practice. In returning to in-person music making, practitioners should be aware of the creative ways in which families were musically active during this time apart. We urge diligent community musicians to continue responsive practices in relation to the ways in which families facilitate their own musical lives and community in the home.
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家庭是社会参与的小社区隔离舱
本文考虑了11个美国家庭的音乐生活,各种微社区,因为他们受到COVID-19大流行和相关的物理隔离指令的影响。我们将重点放在作为社区的地点和来源的家庭豆角上,采用了虚拟人种学的过程,包括访谈、观察和分发相机,以帮助参与者,特别是儿童,成为一项名为“COPE项目”的研究的积极合作者。这些家庭表示,在这段时间里,他们用乐器、声音和彼此学习、倾听、移动和创造音乐,有各种各样的目的。这些包括自我调节、身份形成、传播、社会凝聚力、情感纽带、具体化的沟通、福祉和对公共音乐表达作为人类需求的认识。我们注意到,在某些情况下,这种断裂是重新聚焦、重新设计和重新设想的机会,以影响社区音乐实践。回到面对面的音乐创作,从业者应该意识到在这段时间里,家庭音乐活动的创造性方式。我们敦促勤奋的社区音乐家在家庭中促进自己的音乐生活和社区的方式方面继续采取响应性做法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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