CALL FOR PAPERS
INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP
“Comparative Musicology in the 21st Century”
Venue: Department of Music, University of Ghana, Legon
Date: 15 to 17 September 2026
The department of music, University of Ghana in collaboration with the Collaborative
Research Center ‘Transformations of the Popular’ (sub-project ‘Low Pop’) at the University of
Siegen, Germany is organizing a 3-day international workshop titled “Comparative musicology
in the 21st Century”
Concept
The field once known as comparative musicology, later redefined as ethnomusicology, was
historically shaped by Eurocentric frameworks that positioned non-European music(s) as
sources for reconstructing the prehistory of Western art music. While it is basically productive
to work with a comparative approach that is ‘free of centrisms’ (Mendívil 2014: 386; cf.
Clayton 2011), postcolonial and decolonial scholarship has long challenged such hierarchies,
a pressing question remains: what does it mean to pursue comparative music research in the
21st century, particularly from Africa? This workshop proposes to revisit comparative
musicology from the South, grounding it in African epistemologies, collaborative knowledge-
making, and the cultural realities of the digital age. Kwabena Nketia’s (1984) call for universal
perspectives in ethnomusicology already anticipated the need for comparative approaches
that situate African traditions within global conversations rather than at their margins.
Building on that vision, the workshop aims to rethink comparison as a dialogic, co-creative,
and multi-sited process that emerges through shared musical practices, rather than as a one-
directional act of classification. Ghana offers an ideal context for such rethinking. As the
birthplace of highlife and a major node in transnational musical exchange, Ghanaian sound
cultures, including the traditional and popular, exemplify how African musicians have long
engaged in comparative processes through adaptation, translation, and experimentation.
From early highlife orchestras and church music syncretism to today’s Afrobeats and digital
remix cultures, the Ghanaian experience reveals comparison as a lived, creative act. In the
21st century, digitization, AI-driven listening, and trans-local collaboration further expand the
terrain of comparative inquiry. The workshop will therefore explore new frameworks for
understanding how musical ideas travel, transform, and acquire meaning across space,media, and ideology. The workshop aims to articulate models of comparison that
are reciprocal, decolonial, and future-oriented by bringing together scholars, artists, and
early-career researchers to dialogue.
Format and Communication
The three-day workshop will explore contemporary issues, opportunities, and challenges in
comparative music research. Scholars at all stages of their careers, and PhD students are
invited to contribute by sharing insights from ongoing or completed projects, or by offering
theoretical perspectives for discussion.
Suggested guiding questions for contributions include:
• Which musical phenomena, current and historical, lend themselves to comparative
research?
• What constitute revealing and productive moments of comparison (tertia
comparationis)?
• What are the key potentials and limitations of comparative approaches?
• What challenges do transnational cultural exchange, globalisation and digitisation
pose for comparative music research?
• Which collaborative approaches are relevant to implement comparative research
equitably and without any centrism?
Abstract Submission and Guidelines
We invite abstracts of up to 250 words that address the workshop theme and subthemes.
Abstracts should clearly outline the main argument, methodology, and significance of the
research.
Abstracts should be submitted by June 15, 2026, via email to: Dr. Eyram Fiagbedzi –
eekfiagbedzi@ug.edu.gh, and Prof. Florian Heesch – florian.heesch@musik.uni-siegen.de
Please use the following subject line in your email submission:
Subject: Submission – Comparative Musicology Workshop
Each submission should include title of the paper, author’s name, institutional affiliation, and
contact information.
Important Dates:
• Abstract Submission Deadline: June 15, 2026
• Notification of Acceptance: June 30, 2026
For any inquiries, please contact the conference organizers eekfiagbedzi@ug.edu.gh ;
florian.heesch@musik.uni-siegen.de.
We look forward to receiving your contributions!