Carol Muller contributed to the upcoming "Routledge Companion to Diasporic Jazz Studies," with her chapter focusing on exploring the diaspore in South African Jazz History and Contemporary Performance. The comprehensive volume examines jazz as a global phenomenon, emphasizing the unique narratives and cultural identities that emerge from diasporic experiences.
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Muller also published three additional articles last year within multiple publications:
Diasporic musical landscapes: Abdullah Ibrahim, Johnny Dyani, and Sathima Bea Benjamin in an African Space Program (1969-1980)
intimate entanglements in the ethnography of performance: race, gender, vulnerability (awarded honorable mention for the Ellen Koskoff Edited Volume Prize by the Society for Ethnomusicology)
Chapter 8: Ethnomusicological Becoming: Deep Listening as Erotics in the Field
Social Voices: The Cultural Politics of Singers around the Globe
Chapter 9: Women, Political Voice, and the South African Diaspora, 1959-2020
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