Felicia
Sandler
The writing of Felicia Sandler's theory dissertation, Music of the Village in the Global Marketplace: Self-Expression, Inspiration, Appropriation or Exploitation?, involved extensive research, necessitating research trips to Ghana West Africa (the International Center for African Music and Dance, and work with master musicians in various villages), the Office for the High Commissioner of Human Rights (working group meeting in Geneva on the redrafting of the Principles and Guidelines for the Protection of the Cultural Heritage of Indigenous Peoples in which she participated), and a month's study at the World Intellectual Property Organization in Geneva. She has given papers and presentations on her topic at the international conference Music and Cultural Rights: Trends and Prospects (University of Pittsburgh), the National Conference of the Society for Ethnomusicology (Tucson), Borrowing Other People's Music at the Intercultural Institute (New England Conservatory), the 2nd Annual International conference Crossroads in Cultural Studies (Finland), the University of Michigan Ethnomusicology Colloquium, and the Center for the Education of Women at the University of Michigan. B.M. in composition and theory, Conservatory of Music, University of the Pacific; MLM in Liturgical Music, The Catholic University of America; PhD in composition and theory, University of Michigan. Former faculty of Bowling Green State University and University of Michigan. Related links: |