In her landmark book, In Search of Music Education (University of Illinois Press, 1997), Estelle R. Jorgensen lays the groundwork for the philosophy of music education, of which she is today’s foremost proponent. Decidedly not a “how-to” manual, her book poses difficult questions undergirding a systematic reflection on, first, the nature of education (Chapter 1); the nature of music (Chapter 2), and the dialectics and dialogics of music education (Chapter 3), reconciling the tensions and ambiguities when music and education are combined as an autonomous yet porous discipline. Jorgensen cites John Dewey, Paulo Freire, Maxine Greene, Susanne Langer, Israel Scheffler, and Alfred North Whitehead as her philosophical mentors, but it is Aristotle...
This chapter returns to Jorgensen’s 2003 publication Transforming Music Education. Kertz-Welzel revi...
Against a contemporary backdrop of soundbite news stories and intransigent political divisions, musi...
The chapter explores intimacy as a critical site of power and resistance. More specifically, intimac...
Numerous scholars have provided philosophical perspectives to justify the inclusion of music educati...
This short philosophical chapter borrows and diverges from Estelle Jorgensen’s In Search of Music Ed...
This chapter chronicles the influence of Jorgensen’s writing in a graduate choral music education co...
Estelle Jorgensen’s Pictures of Music Education provides an exploration of music education through f...
This chapter takes Jorgensen’s thoughts regarding how music education can contribute to a better wor...
A change has been going on in both the philosophy of music education and the general philosophy of m...
This chapter will address the multiplicity of models and metaphors set out in Jorgensen’s Pictures o...
In this chapter, I examine Jorgensen’s dialectical approach to music education from Chinese philosop...
This chapter considers the question of how music educators determine the musical ends towards which ...
This chapter reconsiders the notion of the good, the true, and the beautiful for music education in ...
This essay asks the question: How are we to think of what Estelle Jorgensen has called “the transgre...
In the field of music education philosophy, several contributors have significantly impacted how we ...
This chapter returns to Jorgensen’s 2003 publication Transforming Music Education. Kertz-Welzel revi...
Against a contemporary backdrop of soundbite news stories and intransigent political divisions, musi...
The chapter explores intimacy as a critical site of power and resistance. More specifically, intimac...
Numerous scholars have provided philosophical perspectives to justify the inclusion of music educati...
This short philosophical chapter borrows and diverges from Estelle Jorgensen’s In Search of Music Ed...
This chapter chronicles the influence of Jorgensen’s writing in a graduate choral music education co...
Estelle Jorgensen’s Pictures of Music Education provides an exploration of music education through f...
This chapter takes Jorgensen’s thoughts regarding how music education can contribute to a better wor...
A change has been going on in both the philosophy of music education and the general philosophy of m...
This chapter will address the multiplicity of models and metaphors set out in Jorgensen’s Pictures o...
In this chapter, I examine Jorgensen’s dialectical approach to music education from Chinese philosop...
This chapter considers the question of how music educators determine the musical ends towards which ...
This chapter reconsiders the notion of the good, the true, and the beautiful for music education in ...
This essay asks the question: How are we to think of what Estelle Jorgensen has called “the transgre...
In the field of music education philosophy, several contributors have significantly impacted how we ...
This chapter returns to Jorgensen’s 2003 publication Transforming Music Education. Kertz-Welzel revi...
Against a contemporary backdrop of soundbite news stories and intransigent political divisions, musi...
The chapter explores intimacy as a critical site of power and resistance. More specifically, intimac...