FY2001
North American musicological research on South Asian music and performing arts
during the 1980s saw a shift from the musicology methods that had prevailed previously
to research that emphasized an anthropological perspective. Since that time, such
research has incorporated interests in a wide variety of issues related to gender,
historicity, culture production, and diasporas. Nevertheless, in Japan even until
now we cannot say that scholarly interchanges between researchers with a background
in musicology and anthropologists with an interest in music and the performing
arts have been adequate. Consequently such research has stagnated. In this joint
research, by mutually investigating using the research methods and methodology
of all members, we aim to set a new course that will fuse musicology with cultural
anthropology. This work should also reconfirm the special characteristics of South
Asian music and performing arts for Japan, and establish a process for us to search
for possibilities for a unique research perspective.