Coordinatore | THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE
Organization address
address: The Old Schools, Trinity Lane contact info |
Nazionalità Coordinatore | United Kingdom [UK] |
Totale costo | 270˙636 € |
EC contributo | 270˙636 € |
Programma | FP7-PEOPLE
Specific programme "People" implementing the Seventh Framework Programme of the European Community for research, technological development and demonstration activities (2007 to 2013) |
Code Call | FP7-PEOPLE-2010-IEF |
Funding Scheme | MC-IEF |
Anno di inizio | 2012 |
Periodo (anno-mese-giorno) | 2012-01-01 - 2013-12-31 |
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THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE
Organization address
address: The Old Schools, Trinity Lane contact info |
UK (CAMBRIDGE) | coordinator | 270˙636.80 |
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'Why does creativity flourish in some music scenes? What makes other scenes seem creatively stifling? And what can educators, administrators, and policymakers do to provide and enhance enabling conditions for creativity?
This project examines the sociocultural factors that enable and inhibit creativity in music. The majority of previous research on creativity analyzes internal processes – more research is urgently needed to examine external influences on creativity. Using ethnographic field research methods, which have rarely been applied to creativity studies, I will investigate how ideology, learning methods, social pressures, financial infrastructures, and copyright practices encourage or restrict musical creativity.
Primary case study data will come from fieldwork on music-cultures in Finland, which offer exemplary models of creativity enhancement strategies. Comparative fieldwork will be conducted in contrasting musical environments in California, and analyzed with reference to published ethnographic data on music scenes in diverse cultures. Cambridge University and the Research Centre for Musical Performance as Creative Practice will provide training in creativity research in musicology, psychology, education, arts policy, and copyright. I will synthesize these multidisciplinary perspectives with cross-cultural data to develop new theories of musical creativity. These theories will be relevant and applicable to creativity in other domains and sectors. Results will be disseminated through a monograph published at a major university press and through publicly accessible online materials designed to train educators and policymakers in the enhancement of creativity enabling conditions.
This research answers the European Council's recent (2007, 2009) call for more research on how culture, policies, and education stimulate creativity, for models of good practices and strategies for enhancing cultural creativity, and for more evidence to inform policymaking'
Are some social and cultural environments more conducive to musical creativity? The MUSICALCREATIVITY project studied several music cultures in a an attempt to answer this question.
With the support of EU funding, the 'Sociocultural enablers and inhibitors of musical creativity: A cross-cultural comparison' (MUSICALCREATIVITY) project examined music cultures to establish whether some promote greater creativity than others, and, if so, why.In this context, the two major goals were to identify sociocultural enablers and inhibitors of musical creativity, and to understand their mechanisms of influence.
The third goal was to recommend strategies that will promote wider engagement in creative activities and also increased creative risk-taking.Selecting Helsinki in Finland, Cape Town in South Africa and Los Angeles in the United States, project members carried out comparative case studies to create a foundation for cross-cultural comparisons.
The music scenes from these three areas were chosen for their distinct cultural attitudes and belief systems, as well as their different approaches to music education and its funding.
They also have multiple music scenes and varying degrees of institutionalisation, commercialisation, ethnocultural diversity and socioeconomic inequality.
Musicians from the areas of classical, jazz and local folk/traditional music were chosen.
For each of the three scenes, qualitative research included ethnographic participant observation of performances, rehearsals and learning situations as well as in-depth interviews.
Transcriptions of the interviews with 110 musicians, music educators and other music personnel served as the primary data set for the project's main results and findings.
Ethnographic data were used to frame and contextualise the interview data.
This allowed for a more accurate and culturally sensitive interpretation.
Research produced a model describing what musical creativity entails, and identified the inner resources facilitating musical creativity and sociocultural factors promoting or inhibiting it.
MUSICALCREATIVITY was also able to explain the developmental and socio-psychological mechanisms through which sociocultural factors influence capacity for musical creativity.
Following, strategies were recommended to help overcome inhibitions and promote increased creativity.
These can be employed at individual, educational and policy levels.
MUSICALCREATIVITY succeeded in contributing an improved theoretical understanding of the nature of creativity, relevant beyond the domain of music.
Its proposed practical applications will help increase awareness of creativity-inhibiting practices and promote broader public engagement as well as greater degrees of creative risk-taking.
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