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George Herzog (* December 11, 1901 – November 4, 1983) was an American anthropologist, folklorist, musicologist, and ethnomusicologist.

George Herzog
Born(1901-12-11)December 11, 1901
Budapest, Austria-Hungary
DiedNovember 4, 1983(1983-11-04) (aged 81)
Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.
Education
  • Budapest Music Academy
  • Hochschule für Musik
  • Columbia University
EmployerIndiana University Bloomington
Known forStudy of Native American language, music and anthropology.
Academic background
ThesisA comparison of Pueblo and Pima musical styles (1938)

Life


Georg Herzog studied at the Budapest Music Academy from 1917 to 1919, and at the Hochschule für Musik in Charlottenburg. Starting in 1921, he assisted Carl Stumpf and Erich Moritz von Hornbostel in the Berliner Phonogramm-Archiv. In 1925, he emigrated to the United States, where he received a postgraduate degree in anthropology from Columbia University. While there, he studied with Franz Boas, Edward Sapir and Ruth Benedict. In 1930/31 he went on a research trip to Liberia, where he recorded, on behalf of Sapir, the language and folk music of the Jabo people.[1] He received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1935 (and 1947). Through field research, he wrote his doctoral thesis in 1937 A comparison of Pueblo and Pima musical styles which made him one of the fore-most authoritative scholars for American Indian music. He taught and conducted research at the University of Chicago, Yale University and Columbia University. During World War II, he worked in the US Army in Military Intelligence.

Herzog was a professor of Anthropology at Indiana University Bloomington from 1948 to 1958 where he formally established the Archives of Traditional Music which he had begun collecting in 1936 while he was at Columbia University. His establishing of a formal sound recording archive, in the model of the Berliner Phonogramm-Archiv, shaped the nascent field of ethnomusicology by centering the preservation of sound recordings as a crucial methodological approach in the discipline. This legacy was carried forward by his student Bruno Nettl who continued the work of bring together ethnology and cultural anthropology with historical and systematic musicology.[2] Herzog was a North American pioneer in the field of ethnomusicology and posed such radical research questions as: "do animals have music?" (1941).[3]

Herzog was a member of the Board of Advisers of the Institute of Jazz Studies and was briefly president in 1955. He, along with David P. McAllester, Alan Merriam, Willard Rhodes und Charles Seeger, founded the Society for Ethnomusicology.[4] After a serious illness in 1950, he had to give up work in 1958, retired in 1962, and lived for the next twenty years in a sanatorium.


Writings (selection)



Further reading



References


  1. Jabo language
  2. Thram, Diane (2014). "Chapter 9: The legacy of music archives in ethnomusicology: a model for engaged ethnomusicology". In McCollum, John; Hebert, David G. (eds.). Theory and Method in Historical Ethnomusicology. Lexington Books. pp. 282–306. ISBN 978-0-739-16826-4.
  3. Bulletin of the American Musicological Society, Aug. 1941, S. 3f. Note from Rachel Mundy among others: Nature's Music: Birds, Beasts, and Evolutionary Listening in the Twentieth Century. (Dissertation, abstract)
  4. Society for Ethnomusicology, website



На других языках


[de] George Herzog

George Herzog (* 11. Dezember 1901 in Budapest, Österreich-Ungarn; † 4. November 1983 in Indianapolis) war ein amerikanischer Musikwissenschaftler und Musikethnologe.
- [en] George Herzog (ethnomusicologist)



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