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Book: Myth, Mimesis and Magic in the Music of the T’boli, Philippines

TitleMyth, Mimesis and Magic in the Music of the T’boli, Philippines
Authors
Issue Date2005
PublisherAteneo de Manila University Press.
Citation
Mora, M. Myth, Mimesis and Magic in the Music of the T’boli, Philippines. Manila: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 2005 How to Cite?
AbstractWhy is musical mimesis so much a part of the cultural world of indigenous Filipinos? What does it tell us about their musical sensibilities and their social world? This book addresses these issues through a study of the relations between musical poetics, myth, and magic in the musical and spiritual lives of T’boli men and women from the highlands of southwestern Mindanao. Manolete Mora’s study shows that musical mimesis is an intrinsic part of the cultural process of interpreting, articulating, making, and remaking the world. More significantly, it suggests that musical mimesis is intimately linked to a moral universe that is grounded in reciprocity. Musical mimesis is a way of establishing contact, fusion and identity with the "other," and this is possible because of the existence of concepts of knowledge and being that are fundamentally different from our own. This book embraces wide-ranging ethnographic materials and issues that will be of interest to the musicologist, anthropologist, and student of Southeast Asian folklore and cross-cultural aesthetics.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/119565
ISBN

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorMora, Men_HK
dc.date.accessioned2010-09-26T08:57:56Z-
dc.date.available2010-09-26T08:57:56Z-
dc.date.issued2005en_HK
dc.identifier.citationMora, M. Myth, Mimesis and Magic in the Music of the T’boli, Philippines. Manila: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 2005-
dc.identifier.isbn978-971-550-493-5-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/119565-
dc.description.abstractWhy is musical mimesis so much a part of the cultural world of indigenous Filipinos? What does it tell us about their musical sensibilities and their social world? This book addresses these issues through a study of the relations between musical poetics, myth, and magic in the musical and spiritual lives of T’boli men and women from the highlands of southwestern Mindanao. Manolete Mora’s study shows that musical mimesis is an intrinsic part of the cultural process of interpreting, articulating, making, and remaking the world. More significantly, it suggests that musical mimesis is intimately linked to a moral universe that is grounded in reciprocity. Musical mimesis is a way of establishing contact, fusion and identity with the "other," and this is possible because of the existence of concepts of knowledge and being that are fundamentally different from our own. This book embraces wide-ranging ethnographic materials and issues that will be of interest to the musicologist, anthropologist, and student of Southeast Asian folklore and cross-cultural aesthetics.-
dc.languageengen_HK
dc.publisherAteneo de Manila University Press.en_HK
dc.titleMyth, Mimesis and Magic in the Music of the T’boli, Philippinesen_HK
dc.typeBooken_HK
dc.identifier.emailMora, M: mmora@hkucc.hku.hken_HK
dc.identifier.authorityMora, M=rp01217en_HK
dc.identifier.hkuros140008en_HK

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