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If Colors Could be Heard: Narratives about Racial Identity in Music Education [Hardback]

Edited by (Purdue University, USA), Edited by (Columbia College Chicago), Edited by (Independent researcher)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 301 pages, height x width: 244x170 mm, 4 Halftones, black and white
  • Sērija : Contemporary Music Making and Learning
  • Izdošanas datums: 20-Oct-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Intellect Books
  • ISBN-10: 1835951678
  • ISBN-13: 9781835951675
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Formāts: Hardback, 301 pages, height x width: 244x170 mm, 4 Halftones, black and white
  • Sērija : Contemporary Music Making and Learning
  • Izdošanas datums: 20-Oct-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Intellect Books
  • ISBN-10: 1835951678
  • ISBN-13: 9781835951675
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
A deeply personal and scholarly exploration of how race and ethnicity shape the ways we learn, teach, and experience music.

If Colors Could Be Heard: Narratives About Racial Identity in Music Education is a groundbreaking collection of firsthand accounts by music educators, artists, activists, and students from the Global Majority. These deeply personal narratives explore how race and ethnicity shape experiences in music learning, making, and teaching.

From stories of childhood discovery to reflections on navigating racial identity in the classroom, these voices paint a complex and vivid portrait of music education in the United States. Going beyond a collection of research studies, this book embraces self-reflective storytelling as a legitimate and essential method of inquiry, offering a scholarly mosaic of lived experience.

By centering voices often marginalized in academia, If Colors Could Be Heard challenges dominant narratives and reimagines music education through a lens of equity, identity, and belonging. A must-read for students, educators, and researchers committed to fostering an inclusive and just musical future.
Introduction: Painting Wondrous Tunes with Stories by People of Color



   Christopher Cayari, Jason D. Thompson, and Rekha S. Rajan 





Section I: Intersectionality 



Orientation I: Intersectionality and Music Education: Why Identity Matters,
Especially for People of Color 



   Christopher Cayari 



1. "From minor to Major feelings, I am more than just Stop Asian Hate 20



   Alice Tsui  



2. In Her Voice: (Re)Visioning Race and Gender in the Music Classroom through
the Lens of Black Feminist Pedagogy



   Paula Grissom Broughton 



3. Coming Out as Asian: Multiplying Identity and Intersectionality 



   Christopher Cayari 



4. Self-Made?: Representation, Tokenism, and Finding Autonomy as an
Educator 



   Marcus Moone 



5. The Hip-Hop Therapeutic Education of a Single Mother 



   Terriee Pope 







Section II: Forging New Pathways 



Orientation II: Forging Cultural Pathways in Music Learning, Making, and
Teaching 



   Jason D. Thompson and Rekha S. Rajan 



6. Searching Somewhere Over the Rainbow for a Home in Choral Music
Education 



   Dr. Kiernan M. Steiner 



7. Teaching Music in Tkaronto: The Relationship Between Indigeneity and Place
of Practice 



   Joyce Jing Yee Yip and Lee Cheng 



8. My Journey and My Music: Breaking the Hegemony of the Music Classroom in
Hong Kong



   Chi Ying Lam 



9. inVISIBLE: A Journey to (re)claim, (re)embrace, and (re)settle 



   Shuk-Ki Wong 



10. Between the Piano and the Gayageum: From Reversal to Empowerment 



   Sangmi Kang () 



 



Section III: Epiphanies 



Orientation III: Epiphanies: How Reflection and Realization Influence Our
Musical Experiences 



   Christopher Cayari 



11. SPOTLIGHT 



   Rekha S. Rajan 



12: Giving Myself Permission to be a Musician 



   Tina Huynh



13: Just look at Anthony!: Searching for identity, teaching music 



   Anthony Cao 



14: Ni de aquķ ni de allį: The In-Betweenness of AfroLatinidad



   Marjoris Regus 



15: Silent No More: A Vietnamese American Adoptee Speaks About Music
Education And Who I Wronged   



   Kķnh T. V 



 

Section IV: Triumph and Excellence 



Orientation IV: Triumph and Excellence



   Jason D. Thompson 



17: Through the Looking Glass: An Asian American Music Educators
Counter-Story 



   Mindy H. Park 



18: Remixing the Good News: Using Music to Sustain Faith 



   Latasha Thomas-Durrell 



19: Hitting the Music Educational Jackpot: Directing the Marching Band at a
Historic Las Vegas School 



   Alfonzo V. Kimbrough 





Section V: Reimagining Music Education 



Orientation V: Reimagining Music Education: Challenges, Changes and
Triumphs 



   Rekha S. Rajan 



20: The Diversity Within: An Intersectional Challenge/Opportunity 



   Darrin Thornton 



21: Elite Vocal Music Education: Where Perceived Liberalism Doesnt Cut
It 



   Taylor Masamitsu 



22: The Gospel of Musical Inclusion 



   Jason D. Thompson 



23: Musicking With the Other 80%



   Alberto Vargas 



24: I, Too, Wear The Mask 



   Quinton D. Parker 



25: I Can See Clearly Now: Confronting Stereotypes and Assumptions about
Urban Music Education



G. Preston Wilson



 



Epilogue: Carrying the Fire!! of a New Music Education: Devoted to Musicians
of the Global Majority 



   Christopher Cayari



Index
Christopher Cayari is an associate professor of music at Purdue University West Lafayette-Indianapolis, Indiana, USA. Their research interests include popular music, musical theater, race & ethnicity, gender & sexuality, and identity scholarship.





Jason D. Thompson is an an inaugural faculty member at the nations first Black Honors College at California State University, Sacramento, USA. His research interests include socially engaged arts practices, music participation as civic engagement, and the ways culture shapes musical experiences.





Rekha S. Rajan is an award-winning classically trained singer who has performed in musicals, operas and operettas across the U.S. Her bestselling children's literature books encourage young readers to explore the world around them through the arts.