Abstracts
Abstract
This talk explores the evolving landscape of Canadian music studies in the context of intensifying cross-border cultural and political pressures. Drawing upon historical reflections and contemporary developments, the presentation examines how Canadian music scholarship navigates questions of national identity, academic autonomy, and cultural preservation. It considers the influence of dominant U.S.-based institutions and academic societies on Canadian music studies and reflects on the challenges posed by shifting geopolitical dynamics, including threats to Canadian sovereignty and academic freedom. The talk highlights the resilience and diversity of Canadian musical traditions and underscores the importance of sustaining a distinct Canadian musical identity. Through case studies, historical parallels, and current responses from artists and scholars, the talk invites a broader conversation about the role music studies might play in affirming cultural sovereignty and fostering inclusive, forward-looking scholarship.
Keywords:
- Canadian music studies,
- cultural sovereignty,
- academic freedom,
- US-Canada relations,
- geopolitical influence on the arts
Résumé
Cette présentation explore l’évolution du paysage des études musicales canadiennes dans un contexte de pressions culturelles et politiques transfrontalières de plus en plus intenses. S’appuyant sur des réflexions historiques et des développements contemporains, elle examine comment la recherche musicale canadienne aborde les questions d’identité nationale, d’autonomie académique et de préservation culturelle. Elle considère l’influence des institutions et sociétés savantes dominantes basées aux États-Unis sur les études musicales canadiennes, tout en réfléchissant aux défis posés par les dynamiques géopolitiques changeantes, notamment les menaces à la souveraineté canadienne et à la liberté académique. La présentation met en lumière la résilience et la diversité des traditions musicales canadiennes, et souligne l’importance de maintenir une identité musicale canadienne distincte. À travers des études de cas, des parallèles historiques et les réponses actuelles d’artistes et de chercheurs, elle invite à une réflexion plus large sur le rôle que peuvent jouer les études musicales dans l’affirmation de la souveraineté culturelle et la promotion d’une recherche inclusive et tournée vers l’avenir.
Mots-clés :
- études musicales canadiennes,
- souveraineté culturelle,
- liberté académique,
- relations États-Unis–Canada,
- influence géopolitique sur les arts
Appendices
Bibliography
- American Musicological Society. 2025. “NEH Grants Terminated: Four AMS Grants Summarily Terminated.” 4 April, https://www.amsmusicology.org/neh-funding-cuts/.
- Bomberger, E. Douglas and Denise Von Glahn. 2025. “SAM members in Canada.” Email message to all Canadian members of the Society for American Music, 17 February.
- Canadian Association of University Teachers / L’Association canadienne des professeures et professeurs d’université, 2025. “Trump Administration Threatening Canadian Researchers.” Press release, 17 March, https://www.caut.ca/news/trump-administration-threatening-canadian-researchers/.
- Canadian Association of University Teachers / L’Association canadienne des professeures et professeurs d’université. 2025. “2025 Supplement to the CAUT Advisory on Travel to the United States.” 5 April, https://www.caut.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/caut-2025-Supplement-to-the-CAUT-Advisory-on-Travel-to-the-United-States-2025-04.pdf [English] / https://www.caut.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/acppu-Supplement-de-2025-a-lAvis-de-lACPPU-aux-voyageurs-a-destination-des-Etats-Unis-2025-04.pdf [French].
- Cumming, Julie. “A Letter from the AMS President: Preserving Our Communities.” Email message to AMS members, 20 March 2025.
- Eden, Max. 2024. “Trump and Vance Promise to Go Henry VIII on Universities.” Washington Examiner, 25 July, hosted on American Enterprise Institute website, https://www.aei.org/op-eds/trump-and-vance-promise-to-go-henry-viii-on-universities/.
- Gregory, Allie. 2025. “Bells Larsen Cancels US Tour Dates, Says Immigration Won’t Recognize Gender Identity.” Exclaim, 11 April, https://exclaim.ca/music/article/bells-larsen-cancels-us-tour-dates-says-immigration-won-t-recognize-gender-identity.
- Lebrecht, Norman. 2025. “A Canadian Composer Is Deported from the US.” Slipped Disc, 13 March, https://slippedisc.com/2025/03/a-canadian-composer-is-deported-from-the-us/.
- Lewanski, Michael. 2020. “The US Classical Music Industry and the White Supremacist Capitalist Patriarchy.” Michael Lewanski, Conductor, 30 December, https://www.michaellewanski.com/blog/2020/12/30/the-us-classical-music-industry-and-the-white-supremacist-capitalist-patriarchy.
- Liddle, Hannah. 2025. “Inside the University of Alberta’s Move Away from Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion: Motivations for the Decision are Being Debated by Members of the University Community,” University Affairs / Affaires universitaires, 28 January, https://universityaffairs.ca/news/inside-the-university-of-albertas-move-away-from-equity-diversity-and-inclusion/.
- Moore, Christopher. 2025. “Official Resignation of Christopher Moore as AMS-NYSSL President.” Email message to AMS-NYSSL chapter members, 5 March.
- Potter, Pamela. 1998. Most German of the Arts: Musicology and Society from the Weimar Republic to the End of Hitler’s Reich. New Haven: Yale University Press.
- Radio-Canada. 2025. “Bells Larsen : chanter la tête haute.” 20 April, https://ici.radio-canada.ca/tele/tout-le-monde-en-parle/site/segments/entrevue/2050045/identite-trans-etats-unis.
- Schabas, Ezra. 1994. Sir Ernest MacMillan: The Importance of Being Canadian. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
- Silova, Iveta. 2025. “Universities in Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union Thought Giving in to Government Demands Would Save Their Independence.” The Conversation, Canada Edition, 9 April, https://theconversation.com/universities-in-nazi-germany-and-the-soviet-union-thought-giving-in-to-government-demands-would-save-their-independence-252888.
- Sweatman, Conrad. 2025. “Winnipeg Composer’s Carnegie Dreams Crumble After Border Snafu.” Winnipeg Free Press, 14 March, https://www.winnipegfreepress.com/arts-and-life/entertainment/arts/2025/03/14/winnipeg-composers-carnegie-dreams-crumble-after-border-snafu.
- University Affairs. 2024. “Bill 18 Positions Alberta Government as Gatekeeper of Federal Research Funding: Opponents Say it Poses a Threat to Academic Freedom, Institutional Autonomy, and the Future of the Postsecondary Sector in Alberta.” 10 July, https://universityaffairs.ca/news/bill-18-positions-alberta-government-as-gatekeeper-of-federal-research-funding/.
- Vance, J.D. 2021. “The Universities are the Enemy.” YouTube, Keynote address, National Conservatism Conference, 2 November, 15’52” to 16’06”, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0FR65Cifnhw.
- Weir, Keziah. 2025. “The Fascism Expert at Yale Who’s Fleeing America,” Vanity Fair, 31 March. https://www.vanityfair.com/news/story/the-fascism-expert-at-yale-whos-fleeing-america.
