Discourse Analysis As Potential
Discourse Analysis As Potential
Discourse Analysis As Potential
4-2013
Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music
Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf
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Discourse Analysis as Potential for Re-Visioning Music Education
Abstract
Discourse analysis holds great potential for re-visioning the field of music education. This paper explores
works from Foucault, Blommaert, Scollon and Scollon, as well as others, to suggest a theoretical and
methodological approach to analyzing discourse in settings of music transmission that takes into
consideration who we are, what we do, and how we do it. Discourse is defined in this paper as meaningful,
mediated language-in-place. By analyzing acts of speech as well as cultural objects (such as instruments,
mallets, and bows) and concepts (such as a conducting gestures or solfege syllables) used as mediational
means in situ, we can reveal how discursive sources of power dominance, inequality, and bias are initiated,
perpetuated, (re)produced, and transformed in sites of music transmission. Analyzing such models may help
develop a more flexible way of understanding and visioning music education—one that blurs boundaries
between musics, ways of knowing music, and spaces where musicking takes place.
Keywords
discourse, discourse analysis, music transmission, power/resistance, ethnography, globalization,
contextualization, uptake, indexicality, intertextuality, mediated action, mediational means, nexus analysis,
social practice
Disciplines
Music Pedagogy
David J. Elliott
Editor
Vincent C. Bates
Associate Editor
Electronic Article
Brent C. Talbot
ISSN 1545-4517
The content of this article is the sole responsibility of the author. The ACT Journal and the
Mayday Group are not liable for any legal actions that may arise involving the article's
content, including, but not limited to, copyright infringement.
Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education Electronic Article 47
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Brent C. Talbot
The Sunderman Conservatory of Music at Gettysburg College
This paper begins with a premise that each person’s musical education is made of multiple
and diverse experiences that occur in settings both in and out of school (Campbell 2002,
2003, 2008; Green 2002, 2005; Jaffurs 2004, 2006). Nevertheless, when we speak and write
about music education, we often restrict the kinds of music, ways of music transmission, and
spaces for music education that we consider. We engage in a process of legitimating music
education: we privilege particular musics, such as those of bands, orchestras and choirs,
along with one approach to knowing music—Western notation. Other kinds of music, such as
dance, ritual, and popular music are limited or non-existent in discussions, and the value of
aural transmission and embodied ways of knowing is often diminished. Effects of this
legitimation on music makers, whether they are teachers or students, can include alienation
from music, and from others in social relationships of music making.
How do we understand the effects of this legitimation and engage as teachers,
practitioners, and researchers in re-visioning our field to be more relevant, inclusive and
understanding of multiple ways of knowing and experiencing music? We can begin with a
process of answering who we are; what we know and understand music to be; and how we
experience and transmit this knowledge and understanding. We can consider the tools for
communicating meaning both implicitly and explicitly within and outside our classrooms.
We can consider language and music as social goods, holding certain significance and
enacting certain social, cultural, and historical activities and realities. We can consider how
our tools of communication impact our identities and relationships; and how we use them to
connect, make relevant, and privilege different ways of knowing and believing. In short, we
can analyze our discourse.
Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and
Theory for Music Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf
Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education Electronic Article 48
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Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and
Theory for Music Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf
Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education Electronic Article 49
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reveal (ab)uses of power and resistance. Though Foucault (1978) is interested in power, it
is important to note that he does not develop a theory of power; instead, he describes how
power works in particular historical situations. He claims that power: 1) is not a possession
but a relationship; 2) is not exterior to other relations; that is, power entwines with practices
in complex ways; 3) is present in all aspects of our everyday lives, at the micro levels of
social relations; and 4) is accompanied by resistance (94–5).
3. Our unit of analysis is not an abstract ‘language’ but the actual and densely
contextualized forms in which language occurs in society. We need to focus on
varieties in language, for such variation is at the core of what makes language and
meaning social. . . .One uneasy by-effect of this sociolinguistic use is that we shall
often be at pains to find a name for the particular forms of occurrence of language.
The comfort offered by words such as ‘English’, ‘Zulu’, or ‘Japanese’ is something
we shall have to miss. We shall have to address rather complex, equivocal, messy
forms of language.
4. Language users have repertoires containing different sets of varieties, and these
repertoires are the material with which they engage in communication’ they will
determine what people can do with language. People, consequently, are not entirely
‘free’ when they communicate, they are constrained by the range and structure of
Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and
Theory for Music Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf
Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education Electronic Article 50
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their repertoires, and the distribution of elements of the repertoires in any society is
unequal. Such inequality of repertoires requires us to use a sociolinguistic backdrop
for discourse analysis because what people actually produce as discourse will be
conditioned by their sociolinguistic background. The notion of ‘voice’ must be
situated at the intersection of sociolinguistics and discourse analysis. . . .
Contextualization
The notion of contextualization was developed by Gumperz (1982, 1992) to account for the
ways in which people ‘make sense’ in interaction, whether meanings were said or ‘unsaid’.
Context and contextualization are dialogical phenomena. Blommaert (2005) explains:
It is not the speaker alone who offers context to statements and generates context, but
the other parties in the communication process do so as well. And often what counts
or what is most consequential is the contextualization performed by the one who
receives and decodes the message – the uptake. (43, italics in original)
Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and
Theory for Music Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf
Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education Electronic Article 51
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Uptake
Uptake is made dialogical and occurs as part of a sequence of interaction: one actor offers a
sign, cue, gesture, object, or utterance to be interpreted by others. There is a temporal
dimension to the process of uptake as well. Words or utterances received can only have
meaning after they are offered up for receiving; however, contextualization cues offered by a
speaker may not always be noticed or understood by receivers. Blommaert comments:
Value, meaning, and function are a matter of uptake, they have to be granted by
others on the basis of the prevailing orders of indexicality, and increasingly also on
the basis of their real or potential ‘market value’ as a cultural commodity. The
functions which particular ways of speaking will perform, and the functions of the
particular linguistic resources by means of which they are accomplished, become less
and less a matter of surface inspection in terms of commonsense linguistic categories.
[Therefore] some of the biggest errors (and injustices) may be committed by simply
projecting locally valid functions onto the ways of speaking of people who are
involved in transnational flows. (2005, 72)
Indexicality
Gumperz (2001) indicates that our conversations are filled with inferences that rely on two
types of verbal signs: “symbolic signs that convey information via the well-known lexical
and grammatical rules and indexical signs that signal by direct association between sign and
context” (221). These latter verbal signs are often referred to as indexes—signs that have
some kind of existential relation with what they reference (Burks 1949). Demonstrative
pronouns like this, that, and those; personal pronouns like I and you; temporal expressions
Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and
Theory for Music Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf
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like now, then, yesterday; placement expressions like here and there; and spatial expressions
like up, down, below, above are all words that index a particular object or idea that exists in a
time and place.
According to Duranti (2007), “the property of these expressions has been called
indexicality and has been shown to extend to much of linguistic communication” (17, bold in
original). Duranti further explains that “an expression like “this table includes an imaginary
arrow to something recognizable, most likely something perceptually available to both the
speaker and the addressee” (18). Further complications arise when researchers consider
linguistic resources in conversations that employ more than one type of language. Duranti
indicates,
In bilingual communities, where language switching is a daily affair, the choice of a
particular language over another may index one’s ethnicity or a particular political
stance toward the relation between language and ethnicity (2007, 18).
As music educators, we need to be aware that many of our students and teachers not
only code switch with language, but with music as well. For example, in a study I conducted
(Talbot 2007) of an urban 8th grade female’s in and out of school choral experiences, the
participant regularly helped her fellow classmates negotiate learning through written notation
by switching between aural and written forms of musical transmission. Similarly, in a recent
study I conducted (Talbot 2012) of a Balinese professor teaching gamelan at an American
institution, the participant regularly language and music switched between Western and
Balinese musical terms, signs, and teaching techniques. This type of switching happens every
Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and
Theory for Music Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf
Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education Electronic Article 53
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day when we interact with new people in new settings and try to communicate information—
we uncover pathways in order to create mutual understanding.
Intertextuality
When we speak, we produce the words of others, constantly citing and re-citing expressions
and recycling meanings that are already available. Intertextuality is a term borrowed from
literary theory, but Blommaert explains how it figures into discourse analysis:
Every utterance has a history of (ab)use, interpretation, and evaluation, and this
history sticks to the utterance. . . . Intertextuality grounds discourse analysis firmly
into histories of use—histories that are social, cultural, and political, and which allow
the synchronic use of particular expressions to acquire powerful social, cultural, and
political effects. It invites us to look beyond the boundaries of particular
communicative events and see where the expressions used there actually come from,
what their sources are, whom they speak for, and how they relate to traditions of use.
(46)
Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and
Theory for Music Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf
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factors place certain limits on mediational means, the sociocultural approach I have been
outlining suggests that cultural, historical, and institutional factors also play an essential role”
(33).
By drawing on Wertsch, Scollon and Scollon (2004) foreground study of cultural
objects and concepts as mediational means. They recommend separating a mediational means
from language surrounding it and critically examining its history of use (165). This kind of
analysis has particular import for music transmission studies because, in principle, music
transmission can occur completely without language, typically when a leader or teacher
offers a model and students attempt to imitate it. This can include a teacher’s “my turn, your
turn” gestures, mirroring, or vocables that index particular playing techniques and sounds.
Social Practice
Where mediated actions occur regularly and in a particular context, Scollon and Scollon say
they are indicative of a social practice. The researchers do not use this term to mean a
broadly construed practice, such as the practice of medicine, but instead they prefer “to use it
in the narrowest sense of a single, recognizable, repeatable action such as the practice of
handling an object, filling in a form, switching on a computer, or answering a direct question
in an interview” (13). Bourdieu (1977) referred to such actions as habitus, but Scollon and
Scollon prefer to use Nishida’s term historical body (1958) because it situates action more
precisely in the individual body. These are personal habits “that come to feel so natural that
one’s body carries out actions seemingly without being told” (13). Scollon and Scollon
(2001) point out that this idea of embodiment is central in Foucault’s writings (1972, 1978);
“that within sociocultural and historical periods are particular ways of seeing, analyzing, and
acting in the world which distribute power such that participants in these periods take on the
discipline of living out their periods’ discourses” (542).
Social practices are carried out at some real, material place in the world by human
social actors. In these places, complex aggregates (or nexuses) of many discourses circulate.
Some discourses have little relevance to specific social practices, while others are directly
relevant. Scollon and Scollon use the term discourses in place to “call attention to all of these
discourses and to call attention to the need to study empirically which discourses are relevant
or foregrounded and which discourses are irrelevant (for the moment at least) or
backgrounded for the social action(s) in which [the researcher is] interested” (2004, 14).
Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and
Theory for Music Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf
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Thus, for Scollon and Scollon, “each actor is observed at a site of engagement which is a
particular moment of time in a particular place with particular others present . . . [and] with
characteristic discourses in place. When the social action is routinely taken at a recognizable
time and place we call it a nexus of practice” (14).
Nexus analysis, as defined by Scollon and Scollon (2004), is an approach to discourse
analysis that is particularly apt for studies of music transmission. Like Blommaert, Scollon
and Scollon turn to ethnography to document and analyze local, social practices. Balinese
gamelan in a community setting, guitar instruction at a local music store, and recorder in an
elementary general music class are settings with such social practices. Scollon and Scollon
are concerned with what language means to its users, and they emphasize mediated actions of
social practices. Like Foucault, Scollon and Scollon are concerned with tracing histories of
mediational means, such as musical instruments, vocables, notation, and conducting gestures,
and they ask how current use is related to historical usages. Finally, the researchers are
concerned with uncovering how power relationships are woven into social practices at a
micro level in complex ways.
Scollon and Scollon (2004) provide a fieldguide for conducting nexus analyses.
Among their recommendations are:
1. Enter into a zone of identification with key participants. (153).
2. Map the cycles of people, places, discourses, objects, and concepts in place. Ask How did
these participants all come to be placed at this moment and in this way to enable or carry
out this action? (159–60).
3. Explore objects and concepts as mediational means. At this stage, the researcher treats the
mediational means separate from the discourse and explores how they are used and how
they have become internalized as discourse.
• How did this object come to be present for this action; i.e. through whose agency?
• What is its history of use?
• How thoroughly internalized is this mediational means and by which social
actors?
• How widely is a concept shared among the participants?
• What is its history of use?
• How fully internalized is the concept?
• Is it internalized about the same or equally for all participants?
• Are objects or concepts the result of a resemiotization? The agenda of a meeting,
for example, is normally a printed text which has resemiotized discussions among
a few key administrators or managers which is then used as a mediational means
Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and
Theory for Music Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf
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for the conduct of the meeting by all participants. Similarly, a word such as
learning-disabled or non-compliant may be used to resemiotize a long history of
social interactions (165).
4. Focus on interpersonal relationships and participation structure. Ask: What positions and
alignments are participants taking up in relationship to each other, to the discourses in
which they are involved, the places in which these discourses occur, and to the
mediational means they are using, and the mediated actions which they are taking? (174).
5. Ask: How are social power interests produced in this discourse? This includes all the
forms of discourse: speech of the participants in mediated actions; texts used as mediated
means; images and other semiotic systems used as mediational means; the historical body
of the participants and in the practices in which they engage; the design of the
environment and objects (173).
Implications
So what does this all mean and how is it useful for music teachers, practitioners, and
researchers? In order for us to re-vision our field, we need examples that explain who we are,
what we do, and how we do it. We can reveal this through exploring our discursive practices;
but to do so we need a robust theory and method of analyzing discursive practices specific to
settings of music transmission where talk is coupled with and contextualized by actions of
music making.
Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and
Theory for Music Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf
Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education Electronic Article 57
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the teacher can reach into the student’s own aurally based musicianship to bring him toward
Western notation.
Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and
Theory for Music Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf
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We should also consider that human beings engage with musical practices from
outside their own legacies of participation not to somehow transpose themselves into a new
culture, but to expand their soundscapes, their ways of being musical, and their self-
understanding. In other words, we participate in music to learn who we are and become who
we are not yet. As teachers, we can recognize that students might derive satisfaction from
musical practices and legacies of participation that we share with them, or they might become
frustrated with the legacies we share. Indeed, teachers can learn through analyzing discursive
practices in their own classrooms that students’ satisfaction and frustration, acceptance and
resistance will most likely exist at the same moment in a single site of music transmission. If
teachers can view themselves and their students as shaped by histories that are contingent
rather than inevitable, they can view students’ frustration merely as a temporary state of
being. Teachers can see the possibility that students might understand, appreciate, and
embody new legacies of participation later in their personal histories.
Music teachers, in all sites of music transmission, may have more freedom than they
take up. Using discourse analysis, teachers may discover successful ways to switch between
languages, musics, and legacies of participation. At the same time, teachers are free to resist
homogenization of practice that comes from a centering institution. Teachers are free to share
their cherished ways of knowing and making music with students, just as students and
teachers are free to explore new ways of knowing and making music together.
Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and
Theory for Music Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf
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Brent C. Talbot is Assistant Professor and Coordinator of Music Education at the Sunderman
Conservatory of Music of Gettysburg College in Gettysburg, PA. Prior to joining the
conservatory, Dr. Talbot served as Visiting Instructor in Music Education at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He has taught middle and high school music in the Rochester
(NY) City and Webster (NY) public school districts and was former Coordinator of Music at
Polytechnic Preparatory Day School in Brooklyn, New York. Dr. Talbot earned his Ph.D. and
M.A. in Music Education, as well as a Diploma in Ethnomusicology from the Eastman
School of Music at the University of Rochester, and earned his B.M.E. from the Jacobs
School of Music at Indiana University.
Dr. Talbot’s current research involves using discourse analysis and other ethnographic and
qualitative approaches to examine varied settings of music learning in the United States and
abroad. Brent serves on the steering committee for the MayDay Group and is a peer-reviewer
for the Journal of Homosexuality. He is the author of the book, Finding A Way, which
examines music transmission in cross-cultural classrooms, and the co-author of Empower
Music Technology, a web-based textbook on music technology found
at www.empowermusictech.com. He has published in the Bulletin of the Council for
Research in Music Education, Visions of Research in Music Education, Illinois Music
Educator and PMEA: News. For more information about Brent, visit his website
at www.brentctalbot.com.
Talbot, Brent C. 2013. Discourse analysis as potential for re-visioning music education. Action, Criticism, and
Theory for Music Education 12(1): 47–63. http://act.maydaygroup.org/articles/Talbot12_1.pdf