01649nas a2200289 4500000000100000000000100001008004100002653001700043653001800060653001400078653002000092653002100112653001400133653002000147653003300167653003500200653001900235100002100254700002100275700001700296245006500313856009100378300001200469490000600481520085800487022001401345 d10aanthropology10aantropología10aEthnology10aethnomusicology10aarquivos sonoros10aetnologia10aetnomusicologia10aIntangible cultural heritage10aPatrimônio cultural imaterial10aSound archives1 aMaria Cavalcanti1 aMarco Gonçalves1 aCesar Gordon00aO banjo, a abelha e as flores: entrevista com Anthony Seeger uhttp://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2238-38752018000200657&lang=es a657-6890 v83 aMultiple aspects of Anthony Seeger s professional trajectory are approached in this interview, conducted in the Graduate Program in Sociology and Anthropology, on May 5, 2015. Seeger s strong connection with the banjo leads a conversation that runs through his family and musical ties; his encounter with anthropology at Harvard University and later in Chicago, in the midst of which he also developed his studies of folklore and music; his remarkable passage through Brazil, his research on the Kĩsêdjê and his teaching experience in the Graduate Program in Social Anthropology, at the National Museum of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. His dynamic experience at the forefront of the Folkways Collection at the Smithsonian Institution and his international involvement in intangible cultural heritage policies at UNESCO are also addressed. a2238-3875