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Date:         Mon, 28 Mar 2005 16:12:34 -0500
Reply-To:     Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List
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Sender:       Association for Recorded Sound Discussion List
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From:         andy kolovos <[log in to unmask]>
Subject:      April 5 lecture at Texas A+M: "Representations of Oratory on
              Early Commercial Recordings."
Comments: To: [log in to unmask]
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Folks, With the conference in Austin and all it seemed worthwhile to pass on information about a lecture being held at Texas A+M on the Tuesday following. Those lingering in Texas and those who reside in the neighborhood might find it of interest. Paper title: "'Fellow Townsmen and My Noble Constituents!': Representations of Oratory on Early Commercial Recordings." Speaker: Dr. Richard Bauman, Distinguished Professor, Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology, Indiana University. Where: Stark Gallery, Texas A+M University, College Station, Texas. When: Tuesday, April 5, 7:30 The event is being hosted by Discourse Studies. Reception will follow. Richard Bauman is distinguished Professor of Folklore, and Ethnomusicology, Communication and Culture, and Anthropology at Indiana University and Director of the Folklore Institute there His groundbreaking work on verbal art, performance, festival, and identity have played a key role in folklore and adjacent disciplines such as anthropology, sociolinguistics, communications and American studies. His most recent book, co-authored with Charles Briggs titled _Voices of Modernity_ looks at the connection between language ideology and social inequality and reveals how the critics of modernity have unwittingly played into undemocratic discourses of race, gender, class and nationality. The prestigious awards, grants and fellowships Bauman has received over the course of his career speak directly to his national and international prominence in the academy (Guggenheim Fellow, Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral Sciences Fellow at Stanford, National Endowment for the Humanities Grant, National Endowment for the Arts Grant). He was the editor of the _Journal of American Folklore_, and co-authored classic folklore works with Roger Abrahams and Americo Paredes. -- ********************************* Andy Kolovos Archivist/Folklorist Vermont Folklife Center P.O. Box 442 Middlebury, VT 05753 (802) 388-4964 akolovos @ vermontfolklifecenter.org http://www.vermontfolklifecenter.org


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