Emma sutton on Robert Louis Stevenson

Stevenson, music and colonial history


Some information on Emma Sutton’s research on Stevenson, music and colonial history, from St Andrew’s University website:


Professor Emma Sutton’s recent research explores the role of music in the colonial history of the Pacific islands. It focuses on the networks of indigenous Polynesian and Micronesian musicians with whom the Scottish writer Robert Louis Stevenson made music during the last six years of his life when he lived and travelled extensively in the Pacific region. During the late 1880s and 1890s, Stevenson – who was a prolific self-taught amateur composer – regularly made music with the Polynesian and Micronesian individuals he met; exchanged poems, songs and instruments with islanders; and formed warm relationships with influential champions and exponents of Polynesian music and culture, including the last monarch of the Hawai‘ian Kingdom, Queen Liliʻuokalani. Professor Sutton’s archival work in Sāmoa and Hawai‘i since 2016 has identified unknown accounts of Stevenson’s music-making with islanders and located music written or performed by Polynesian musicians. This work has been supported by the Royal Society of Edinburgh and the Carnegie Trust, among others.

Robert Louis Stevenson

As an Associate of St Andrews Centre for Pacific Studies, Emma has worked closely with indigenous Pacific scholars for over a decade. With the support of SFC-GRCF funding since 2018, she was able to facilitate funding for a project developed by musicians and scholars at the National University of Sāmoa whose generous sharing of cultural expertise had enriched her understanding of the types of music Stevenson heard in Polynesia. The ‘Recovering Sāmoan Instruments’ project is a collaboration between NUS and St Andrews; the project’s activities are led by Susau Fanifau Konousi-Solomona and her colleagues in Music at NUS. The project focuses on gathering and reviving knowledge of customary Sāmoan musical instruments, the collective memory of which is fading. The recording of this knowledge is a vital step in securing a cultural legacy for future generations but the project also supports new creative work, having commissioned new writing and music from eminent Sāmoan writer Sia Figiel and distinguished Sāmoan composer Igelese Ete.

[…]

To date, the project research has featured in concerts and in TV broadcasts in Samoa, giving the project a national audience. Project members acknowledge with gratitude the village communities whose members have generously shared their cultural knowledge and expertise.


You can read the full blog post on the website of the School of English, St Andrew’s University, Scotland.

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