Carnegie Mellon University

the cover of the book "The Games Black Girls Play: Learning the Ropes from Double-Dutch to Hip-Hop"

Kyra Gaunt

CAS Speakers Series

March 18, 2022
12:30pm

Kyra Gaunt, Ph.D. is a notable ethnomusicologist and innovative pedagog whose ethnography The Games Black Girls Play: Learning the Ropes from Double-Dutch to Hip-Hop published by New York University Press won the 2007 Alan Merriam Book Prize for most outstanding English-speaking monograph awarded by the Society for Ethnomusicology.

Supported by a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities as well as a Senior Postdoctoral Fellowship from the Ford Foundation, The Games Black Girls Play contributed to the emergence of black girlhood studies and hip-hop feminism. It also inspired the choreographic work BLACK GIRL: Linguistic Play by Camille A Brown and Dancers, which was nominated for a 2016 Bessie Award for Outstanding Production and was staged at The Joyce Theater, Jacob's Pillow, and The Kennedy Center.

For over 20 years, Professor Gaunt's black feminist scholarship and "new jack" pedagogy in music, anthropology, and sociology has focused on challenging patriarchy, sexism, and white supremacy.

Her scholarship can be found in the peer-reviewed journals Musical Quarterly (2002), Parcours Anthropologiques (2012), The Journal for Popular Music Studies (2019, 2015) as well as in critical texts on hip-hop and feminist studies including Born to Use Mics: Reading Nas's Illmatic (2009), The Girls' History and Culture Reader: The Twentieth Century (2011), Hip-hop and Obama (2015), Black Feminism in Education (2015), and Voicing Girlhood in Popular Music: Performance, Authority, Authenticity (2017), among others. She was also chosen as a member of the 2009 inaugural class of “world changing” TED Fellows by TED (of TED Talks).

Kyra Gaunt earned a Ph.D. in musicology from the School of Music at the University of Michigan. Following appointments at the University of Virginia, NYU, and Baruch and Hunter Colleges at CUNY, Professor Gaunt joined the Department of Music and Theatre at U.Albany in July of 2017. While occasionally singing classical music, she continues to perform as an R&B singer-songwriter and a jazz improvisational vocalist in New York City and in the Capital Region. Her next book examines how music reproduces racism and sexploitation online based on case studies from YouTube to Wikipedia.


Complete Objects of Play Lecture Series