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Gary Tomlinson

4 External links

Gary Alfred Tomlinson is an American musicologist,


and a full-time faculty member at Yale University. He
was formerly the Annenberg Professor in the Humanities
at the University of Pennsylvania.[1] He graduated from
the University of California, Berkeley, with a Ph.D., in
1979 with thesis titled Rinuccini, Peri, Monteverdi, and
the humanist heritage of opera.

Where it all began, Penn Current, Jan. 10, 2008.

Tomlinson became Director of the Whitney Humanities


Center, Yale University, in 2012.[2]

Awards
1988 MacArthur Fellows Program
19921993 Sigmund H. Danziger, Jr. Memorial
Lecturer in the Humanities

Works
Monteverdi and the end of the Renaissance, University of California Press, 1987
Music in renaissance magic: toward a historiography
of others, University of Chicago press, 1993
Metaphysical song: an essay on opera, Princeton
University Press, 1999, ISBN 978-0-691-00409-9
The singing of the New World: indigenous voice in
the era of European contact, Cambridge University
Press, 2007, ISBN 978-0-521-87391-8
(with Joseph Kerman) Listen, sixth edn., Bedford/St.Martins, 2008

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Contributor

The Harvard dictionary of music, Editor Don


Michael Randel, Harvard University Press, 2003,
ISBN 978-0-674-01163-2

References

[1] http://www.sas.upenn.edu/music/faculty/history.html
[2] Musicologist and cultural theorist Tomlinson named director of Whitney Humanities Center. YaleNews. Retrieved 12 June 2015.

5 TEXT AND IMAGE SOURCES, CONTRIBUTORS, AND LICENSES

Text and image sources, contributors, and licenses

5.1

Text

Gary Tomlinson Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Tomlinson?oldid=738531604 Contributors: Bender235, Bgwhite, Gareth


Jones, Ser Amantio di Nicolao, Rigadoun, Waacstats, KConWiki, Boing! said Zebedee, Leszek Jaczuk, Yobot, Pohick2, FrescoBot,
Gatomlin, ClueBot NG, Mdy66, Khazar2, VIAFbot, Chamuss, Jjjk23, KasparBot and Anonymous: 7

5.2

Images

5.3

Content license

Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0

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