Daniel Avorgbedor (Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio)


Submitted: Thurs, 21 August 2003


Dr. Daniel Avorgbedor
Professor of Music and Black Studies
110 Weigel Hall
School of Music
Ohio State University
Columbus, Ohio   43210-1170  USA

phone:  614-292-9441
fax:    614-292-9441
e-mail: avorgbedor.1@osu.edu

     
Web page: http://people.cohums.ohio-state.edu/avorgbedor1/



Special research interests in representations of Africa in the Diaspora,
focusing on the performing arts; contemporary church music in Africa;
urbanization and its impact on the continuity of music and dance
traditions in Africa; theories of identity.


Publications:

Forthcoming 2000: Competition and Conflict as a Framework for
Understanding Performance Culture among the Urban Anlo-Ewe. (Manuscript
accepted and forthcoming in Ethnomusicology).

Forthcoming 2000: (invited paper) 'Hal Performance as Literary Production'
(Forthcoming in the special issue of Research in African Literatures
[March 2000 special issue on Music and Literatures and edited by Kofi
Agawu).

(invited paper)  The Turner-Schechner Model of Performance as Social
Drama: A Re- Examination in the Light of Anlo-Ewe Hal." Research in
African Literatures 30/4 (1998):144-155.

"Anlo-Ewe Music and Society in the Light of Urgent Anthropo-Musicology."
Bulletin of the International Union of Ethonological Sciences, no. 39
(1998):17-26.

Rural-Urban Interchange: Anlo-Ewe Music Garland Encyclopedia of World
Music, 1996, Africa Vol. 1., pp.389-399.
        
"Un voyage vers l'inconnu: Conventions esthétiques dans la musique
des Anlo-Ewe du Ghana,"  Cahiers de musiques traditionnelles 7/1
(1994):105-119.

"Freedom to sing, License to Insult:  The Influence of Hal Performance on
Social Violence among the Anlo-Ewe," Oral Tradition 9/1 (1994): 83-112.
        
"The Impact of Rural-Urban Migration on a Village Music Culture: Some
Implications for Applied Ethnomusicology,"  African Music 7/2
(1992):45-57.
        
"Some Contributions of Hal Music to Research Theory and Pragmatics," Bul.
of the Int. Comm. on Urgent Anthr. & Ethnol. Research 32-33 (1990-91):
61-80.