Sean Williams (ethnomusicologist)
Sean Williams is an ethnomusicologist who teaches at The Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington.
Her primary areas of teaching include music, Irish studies, and Asian studies; she leads the Sundanese music ensembles Gamelan Degung Girijaya and Angklung Buncis Sukahejo. She received a BA in classical guitar performance from UC Berkeley in 1981, and an MA and Ph.D. in ethnomusicology from the University of Washington. Her first teaching jobs were part-time at the University of Washington, then she was hired as a Visiting Assistant Professor at Columbia University in New York City in 1990-1991. In 1991 she was hired at The Evergreen State College. She has also taught on the Semester at Sea, in a faculty exchange program through the University of Hyōgo, and at several adult music camps.
Awards
- 1988 Fulbright Program Doctoral Research Fellowship
- 1989 Ford Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship
- 2012 Alan P. Merriam Prize for Outstanding Monograph in the Field of Ethnomusicology
- 2023 Society for Ethnomusicology Prize for Most Significant Article Published in the Field of Ethnomusicology and Honourable Mention from the .
Books
Williams has written over fifty articles about music, and written or edited several books about music, food, and grammar:- 1998 The Garland Encyclopedia of World Music
- 2001 The Sound of the Ancestral Ship: Highland Music of West Java
- 2005 The Ethnomusicologists' Cookbook
- 2006 Irish Music and the Experience of Nostalgia in Japan
- 2008 The Garland Handbook of Southeast Asian Music
- 2010 Focus: Irish Traditional Music
- 2011 Bright Star of the West: Joe Heaney, Irish Song-Man
- 2015 The Ethnomusicologists' Cookbook, vol.2
- 2019 English Grammar: 100 Tragically Common Mistakes and How to Correct Them
- 2020 Focus: Irish Traditional Music, 2nd edition
- 2021 Musics of the World
- 2026 Music at the Threshold from the Sacred to the Dangerous
Sean Williams is also a musician; she plays numerous Irish, Indonesian, and Brazilian instruments along with the classical guitar, fiddle, and banjo. She sings in Irish, English, Portuguese, Indonesian, and Sundanese.