Available Formats
Music Education in the Caribbean and Latin America: A Comprehensive Guide
By (Author) Raymond Torres-Santos
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
26th January 2017
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Music
Educational strategies and policy
780.71
Hardback
292
Width 222mm, Height 287mm, Spine 23mm
1080g
Music Education in the Caribbean and Latin America: A Comprehensive Guide, features music education from twenty of the most important Latin American countries and Caribbean islands. The islands and countries represented are: Central America: Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mxico, Nicaragua and Panam South America: Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Per, Uruguay and Venezuela Caribbean: Cuba, Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Puerto Rico and Trinidad and Tobago Each chapter will address some -or all- of the following aspects: the early days,music education in Roman Catholic education/convents, Protestanteducation, public school/music in the schools, cultural life, music inthe community, teacher training, private teaching, conservatory andother institutions, music in university/higher education, instrumentaland vocal music, festivals and competitions, teacher education andcurriculum development, and professional organizations.
Music Education in the Caribbean and Latin America, a book devised and compiled by Dr. Raymond Torres-Santos, will certainly soon be a very valuable introductory guide for English speaking readers to a fascinating region of the world where I live and make music constantly. Have it, read it! -- Ana Luca Frega, PhD, National Academy of Education, Argentina; past president, International Society of Music Education (ISME); co-dditor, The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy in Music Education
This book is extraordinarily important and a most needed one. Kudos to Dr. Raymond Torres-Santos, general editor, and to Rowan and Littlefield Education, formagnificently unveiling a significant cultural and sociological subject, one which, until now, has been greatly ignored in the United States. -- Aurelio de la Vega, PhD, composer, distinguished emeritus professor, California State University, Northridge
An important book in the field of music education that broadens the visibility of the Caribbean and Latin America. Adopting different approaches, the chapters provide knowledge about a range of countries, and their ways of conceiving and realizing music education. They can help us to better understand music education around the world and its relationship to diversity. -- Luciana Del Ben, PhD, Music Educator and Scholar, Professor, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul - Brazil
In Music Education in the Caribbean and Latin America, editor Raymond Torres-Santos has brought together a distinguished group of scholars to write highly significant and timely essays on the rich diversity of music educational practices in Latin American and the Caribbean. These studies not only examine contemporary systems and philosophies, but trace the manner in which music has been taught orally and in written form through time, from the pre-colonial, indigenous periods to the emergence of national styles and the development of innovative methods such as Venezuelas El Sistema. Recognizing the cultural, racial mosaic that has characterized Latin America and the Caribbean, Torres-Santos has invited scholars representing the majority of the countries encompassing the cultural area, and who have incorporated the intercultural factors that have affected the teaching of music, from European models to their interface with African and indigenous concepts, resulting in the musical mixtures of mestizaje and their effect in educational approaches. Although much has been written in Latin America and the Caribbean on the topic of music education, this book fills a lacuna in the related literature by bringing these individual national contexts into one volume of collected essays. Furthermore, it makes this dynamic topic accessible to the English speaking sector. The National Association of Music Education must be commended for commissioning Torres-Santos to edit this important contribution to the fields of music education, ethnomusicology, historical musicology, and music composition and theory. -- Steven Loza, Professor and Chair of Ethnomusicology, The UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
Raymond Torres-Santos is a scholar, educator, administrator, composer, conductor, arranger and pianist. His scholarly work focuses on Music Education, Composition/Creativity, Multiculturalism, Music Criticism and Inter-Disciplinary Studies. His articles appear in peer-reviewed journals from City University of New York (CUNY) and Hofstra University as well as in a book published by the Cambridge Scholar Publishing.