01445nas a2200181 4500000000100000000000100001008004100002653003500043653002600078653003200104100002000136245011000156856007000266300001000336490000700346520089600353022001401249 d10aIndigenous peoples (THE\_1844)10aLanguages (THE\_1435)10aMinority groups (THE\_1697)1 aCatherine Grant00aRethinking Safeguarding: Objections and Responses to Protecting and Promoting Endangered Musical Heritage uhttps://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17411912.2012.641733 a31-510 v213 aThe widespread threat to certain kinds of music genres (particularly those of indigenous and minority peoples) resulting from major socio-economic and political shifts in recent decades has stimulated a call for applied ethnomusicological engagement with safeguarding. Discourse from the field of language maintenance, however, underscores a number of significant ethical, ideological and pragmatic concerns generated by efforts to safeguard intangible cultural heritage. For ethnomusicologists, these concerns warrant careful consideration. In this paper, I position four primary charges against safeguarding from the language maintenance literature in relation to safeguarding music cultures, thereby hoping to invite new reflections on the challenges we face and the stances we might adopt when helping communities that are trying to protect and promote their endangered musical heritage. a1741-1912