Expertise

Aesthetics, Philosophy of Music and Improvisation, Existentialism, Poststructuralism and Postmodernism, Critical and Cultural Theory

Biography

Dr. Szekely’s primary research and teaching interests are in aesthetics (especially the philosophy of music and improvisation), existentialism, French poststructuralism (especially Roland Barthes and Gilles Deleuze), and Frankfurt School critical theory (especially Walter Benjamin). He has published articles in such journals as Jazz Perspectives, Social Semiotics, Textual Practice, Rhizomes, Contemporary Aesthetics, Popular Music and Society, and the Oxford Handbook of Philosophy in Music Education, as well as multiple essays for a series on poststructuralism published by Routledge. For several years, Dr. Szekely held week-long seminars at the prestigious Chautauqua Institution in western New York on such topics as: “American Music,” “Nietzsche, Vital Philosopher,” “The Beats,” and “Philosophy and Interdisciplinarity.” Also a practicing musician (drums) and composer with a particular interest in collective improvisation, Dr. Szekely studied jazz at the Hartt School of Music (Hartford) led by the late saxophonist Jackie McLean and percussion with drum master Milford Graves at Bennington College (Vermont). In addition to performances with a number of jazz and improvisational groups, other current and ongoing musical projects include: Unseen Rain (improvisational new music ensemble), Hawk Tubley & The Ozymandians (psychedelic folk rock), The Chairman Dances (indie rock), and The Alternate View (electronics and voice). Dr. Szekely has also performed and/or recorded with Anthony Braxton, Dave Liebman, Ed Mann (Frank Zappa), and Bobby Zankel.

Curriculum Vitae

Selected Publications

Courses Taught

  • Honors Intellectual Heritage
  • Honors Meaning of the Arts
  • Humor
  • Jazz: History, Culture, Aesthetic
  • Myth, Satire, and Spectacle (Everyday Life Studies)
  • Cultural and Aesthetic Appropriation