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  1. Jim Sykes. Jim Sykes (Ph.D., Chicago) is Associate Professor in the Department of Music. A drummer and anthropologist, he works broadly across music and sound studies, South and Southeast Asian studies, and critical social theory.

  2. The Secularism of Music Studies Jim Sykes Why does power need glory? If it is essentially force and capacity for action and government, why does it assume the rigid, cumbersome, and “glorious” form of ceremonies, acclamations, and protocols?

  3. Jim Sykes (Ph.D., Chicago) is Associate Professor in the Department of Music. A drummer and anthropologist, he works broadly across music and sound studies, South and Southeast Asian studies, and critical social theory.

  4. The Anthropocene and Music Studies Published on Ethnomusicology Review (https://ethnomusicologyreview.ucla.edu) The Anthropocene and Music Studies By Jim Sykes The following claim, for some of us, seems obvious: the normative disciplinary boundaries of music studies—historical musicology, ethnomusicology, music theory, and composition—are intimately linked to the discourses, processes, and ...

  5. Jim Sykes. University of Pennsylvania, Music, Faculty Member. Download.

  6. 12 de mar. de 2012 · Jim Sykes, University of Pennsylvania, Music Department, Faculty Member. Studies Ethnomusicology, Singapore, and Malaysia. I'm currently an Associate Professor of Music at the University of Pennsylvania.

  7. Jim Sykes is an Associate Professor of Music at the University of Pennsylvania. To date, his writing has explored the interrelations between sound, music, religion, and ethnicity in the eastern Indian Ocean region, with a focus on Sinhala and Tamil musicians in Sri Lanka and the Tamil diaspora in Singapore.