Kyra Gaunt
Kyra Gaunt
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Kyra Gaunt

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Kyra Gaunt

Kyra Danielle Gaunt is an African American ethnomusicologist, Black girlhood studies advocate, social media researcher, feminist performance artist, and professor at the University at Albany in New York State. Gaunt's research focuses on the hidden musicianship of black girls' musical play at the intersections of race, racism, gender, heterosexism, misogynoir, age, and the kinetic-orality of the female body in the age of hip-hop. Her current research focuses on "the unintended consequences of gender, race, and technology from YouTube to Wikipedia."

She is a native of the Lincoln Park neighborhood in Rockville, Maryland, that began as a segregated Black community founded in 1891. Notable abolitionist author Josiah Henson was enslaved in Rockville and there is some evidence that religious leader Father Divine may have been born there. Gaunt's maternal great-great-grandmother Annie Ford and great-great-grandfather Sheridan Ford escaped his enslavement in Portsmouth, Virginia on the U.G.G.R. (the Underground Railroad) finding freedom in Springfield, Massachusetts in the mid-1850s. She currently resides in Albany, New York.

Gaunt attended the School of Music at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor from 1988-1997, where she earned a Ph.D. in Musicology with a specialization in ethnomusicology. Judith Becker chair her dissertation committee with Janet Hart, Steven Whiting, James Dapogny, and Robin D. G. Kelley as her committee members. She also studied classical voice with operatic tenor George Shirley. She also holds a master's and associate degree in voice from SUNY Binghamton and The American University, respectively.

Gaunt began working in higher education as a professor of hip-hop at the University of Virginia in 1996. She held appointments at NYU, Baruch College and Hunter College in the CUNY system, and is currently a professor at University at Albany, SUNY, where she teaches classes on topics such as music, gender sexuality, and other topics in her research area. Gaunt has spoken about her research and the concepts that surround it in multiple platforms that include a 2018 appearance at Harvard Business School's Gender and Work Symposium, where she spoke about her research Race, Work and Leadership: Learning from and about Black experience. Her research focuses on the musical play of black girls at the "intersections of race, gender, and the body in the age of hip-hop" and the "critical study of the unintended consequences of race, gender, and technology from YouTube to Wikipedia." Gaunt has also edited Wikipedia since 2007 and hosts WikiEdu courses.

According to Gaunt, double-dutch was innovated by young African American girls in urban areas after World War II. In her book, The Games Black Girls Play: Learning the Ropes from Double-Dutch to Hip-Hop, Gaunt invites readers to "broaden their interpretation of black musical experience" to include race, gender and body, and the experience of double dutch can be a path to understanding hip hop culture through a black girl's perspective . Gaunt wrote that double-dutch was an essential part of black girl culture in the U.S.: "If double-dutch dies in neighborhoods, that's bad news for black culture". As the sport became incorporated into public schools, "casual interest in neighborhoods" saw a decline.

Gaunt also compares the sport of double dutch to hip hop, citing "hip and pelvic thrusts" and "rhythmic complexity" as elements that are vital to both. She emphasizes double-dutch is a way of "experiencing black feminism" through its connection to staying on time to keep the movements going.

Gaunt is also a vocalist and singer-songwriter. She has performed her one-woman show Education, Liberation at University at Albany's Performing Arts Center and self produced an album of original R&B/jazz oriented songs (co-written with Tomas Doncker) titled Be the True Revolution (2007).

In 2007 Kyra Gaunt published The Games Black Girls Play: Learning the Ropes from Double-Dutch to Hip-Hop. Her book was awarded the distinguished Alan Merriam Book Prize presented by the Society for Ethnomusicology. It was also nominated as a PEN/Beyond the Margins Book Award finalist. It inspired a work by fellow TED Fellow Camille A. Brown, BLACK GIRL: Linguistic Play, which was nominated for a 2016 Bessie Award for Outstanding Production. Among other significant publications, her peer-reviewed articles appear in Musical Quarterly, Parcours anthropologiques, and the Journal for Popular Music Studies.

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