@article{oai:swu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00005778, author = {永岡, 都 and Nagaoka, Miyako}, journal = {學苑, GAKUEN}, month = {Jun}, note = {Abstract The author, with four colleagues, participated in a series of lectures on Hungarian folk music at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences Research Centre for the Humanities, Institute of Musicology in Budapest from July 27 to August 8, 2013. This paper reports some notable insights from the lectures, inspections of the national musical heritage, and includes an interview with an editor of children's music textbooks. Hungary has a long tradition of studying folk music initiated by Kodaly and Bartok more than a century ago and which continues even today. The vast collection of folk music variants including a great deal of dance music is analyzed from folkloric, historic, and scientific viewpoints and some are compared with that of the other European regions or with classical music associated with the upper classes. The titles of the lectures the author attended tell how this country treasures folk music: "Folk Music as a Source of Music History," "The World of Hungarian Folk Dancing," "Children's Folkloric Play and Its Tradition," and "Bartok as Folklorist." These scholars aim to elucidate the origin of European music. The interview, with an experienced editor of a fascinating national school-music textbook, revealed that the children's music textbooks in Hungary are edited based on the Kodaly method, which was compiled exclusively for Hungarian folk music. Hungarian elementary children repeat the same folk songs learned in kindergarten and theories are gradually introduced as the children progress. Singing is mainly taught to younger children. Hungarian music education has some suggestive points for the Japanese who tend to pay less attention to the nation's folk music. The author hopes to continue watching the effects of their unique education in an increasingly globalized world., 9, KJ00009293579}, pages = {51--66}, title = {〔研究ノート〕 民俗音楽と音楽教育を繋ぐもの--ハンガリーの民俗音楽研究と教科書制作の現場から--}, volume = {884}, year = {2014}, yomi = {ナガオカ, ミヤコ} }