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职称:Assistant Professor of Music
所属学校:University of Pennsylvania
所属院系:music
所属专业:Music, General
联系方式:215-898-3319
Mary Channen Caldwell’s research is on early vocal music, specifically song repertories in premodern Europe that explore the boundaries of sacred and secular. Her dissertation from 2013 examines sacred Latin refrain songs circa 1000-1582 and argues for the role of the largely clerical works within festive moments of the calendrical and church year (Advent, Christmas, the New Year, and Eastertide). Her current research continues to reveal intimate connections between sacred song collections of premodern Europe and overlapping temporal cycles (civic and religious), festive liturgies, and secular musical production. Current projects include a book-length study of seasonal refrains and refrain songs in medieval and renaissance repertories, exploring the intersection of sacred and secular calendrical cycles in music.
Caldwell received her PhD in Music History and Theory from the University of Chicago in 2013 and a Bachelor of Music degree from the School of Music at Queen’s University (Ontario, Canada) in 2006. Prior to her position at the University of Pennsylvania, she held Visiting Assistant Professorships at Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts (Autumn 2013) and at the University of Texas, Austin (Spring 2014), as well as an Assistant Professorship in Musicology at Wichita State University in Wichita, Kansas (2014-2015). Her teaching and research have been supported by the University of Chicago and the American Musicological Society; in 2012 she was awarded both the Stuart Tave Teaching Fellowship in the College from the University of Chicago and the Alvin H. Johnson American Musicological Society 50 Dissertation-Year Fellowship. Caldwell has presented at conferences in Canada, the United States, and Europe, including papers at the national meeting of the American Musicological Society (Autumn 2014) and the Medieval Academy of America (Spring 2015). Recent publications include an article on the fourteenth-century Roman de Fauvel in Early Music History. She has forthcoming articles in an edited volume published by the Medieval Institute’s Early Drama, Art, and Music Monograph Series and in Plainsong & Medieval Music.