Hidden musicality in Chinese Xiangsheng: a response to the call for interdisciplinary research in studying speech and song

Abstract Recent scholarship in the field of music cognition suggests the need for increased interdisciplinarity in moving beyond the boundaries of Western European music, and the study of the relationship between language and music is an especially fruitful area that can benefit from interdisciplina...

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Main Author: Francesca R. Sborgi Lawson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2020-07-01
Series:Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-020-0528-y
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spelling doaj-c98583542fbd4fdea9601b185d9fc8b72021-07-11T11:35:24ZengSpringer NatureHumanities & Social Sciences Communications2662-99922020-07-01711910.1057/s41599-020-0528-yHidden musicality in Chinese Xiangsheng: a response to the call for interdisciplinary research in studying speech and songFrancesca R. Sborgi Lawson0Brigham Young UniversityAbstract Recent scholarship in the field of music cognition suggests the need for increased interdisciplinarity in moving beyond the boundaries of Western European music, and the study of the relationship between language and music is an especially fruitful area that can benefit from interdisciplinary collaboration. This paper heeds the call for collaborative research in cultures outside of Western Europe by focusing on Xiangsheng, a form of Chinese musical comedy that features an intriguing relationship between speech and song in performance. The present paper argues that analytical tools and perspectives from conversational analysis, communicative musicality, empirical research on music-language relationships, and performative mutuality in ethnomusicology all speak to the idea of musicality—the underlying capacity that undergirds our ability to communicate both verbally and musically—as a common foundational behavior in both speech and song. Musicality is particularly apparent in the way Chinese Xiangcheng actors relate to each other and their audiences in both spoken and musical modalities, and this paper suggests how judiciously employing a variety of methodological approaches in the study of musicality can yield important insights for researchers from all disciplines.https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-020-0528-y
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francesca R. Sborgi Lawson
spellingShingle Francesca R. Sborgi Lawson
Hidden musicality in Chinese Xiangsheng: a response to the call for interdisciplinary research in studying speech and song
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
author_facet Francesca R. Sborgi Lawson
author_sort Francesca R. Sborgi Lawson
title Hidden musicality in Chinese Xiangsheng: a response to the call for interdisciplinary research in studying speech and song
title_short Hidden musicality in Chinese Xiangsheng: a response to the call for interdisciplinary research in studying speech and song
title_full Hidden musicality in Chinese Xiangsheng: a response to the call for interdisciplinary research in studying speech and song
title_fullStr Hidden musicality in Chinese Xiangsheng: a response to the call for interdisciplinary research in studying speech and song
title_full_unstemmed Hidden musicality in Chinese Xiangsheng: a response to the call for interdisciplinary research in studying speech and song
title_sort hidden musicality in chinese xiangsheng: a response to the call for interdisciplinary research in studying speech and song
publisher Springer Nature
series Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
issn 2662-9992
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Recent scholarship in the field of music cognition suggests the need for increased interdisciplinarity in moving beyond the boundaries of Western European music, and the study of the relationship between language and music is an especially fruitful area that can benefit from interdisciplinary collaboration. This paper heeds the call for collaborative research in cultures outside of Western Europe by focusing on Xiangsheng, a form of Chinese musical comedy that features an intriguing relationship between speech and song in performance. The present paper argues that analytical tools and perspectives from conversational analysis, communicative musicality, empirical research on music-language relationships, and performative mutuality in ethnomusicology all speak to the idea of musicality—the underlying capacity that undergirds our ability to communicate both verbally and musically—as a common foundational behavior in both speech and song. Musicality is particularly apparent in the way Chinese Xiangcheng actors relate to each other and their audiences in both spoken and musical modalities, and this paper suggests how judiciously employing a variety of methodological approaches in the study of musicality can yield important insights for researchers from all disciplines.
url https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-020-0528-y
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