Dissertations on Music
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Dissertations on Music

Table of Contents


What is a Dissertation?

Dissertations are book-length studies (often original research with extensive bibliographies) that doctoral students write as part of their degree requirements. Usually the degree-granting institution keeps a copy of the dissertation. These copies are often available for loan or purchase.

  • For information about the future of online dissertations, see Yale Fineman's article, "Electronic Theses and Dissertations in Music" in Notes 60, no. 4 (June 2004): 893-907. Full text is available in Project Muse to the UConn community. [link to article]

  • For an article comparing online dissertation tools, see Andrew Toulas's article, "Dissertation Databases on the Web,"Notes 63, no. 1 (September 2006): 159-163. Full text is available in Project Muse to the UConn community. [link to article]

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How to Get a Dissertation

Step 1. Use the databases, Web sites, and print resources below to identify citations to dissertations.

Quick Guide (see detailed descriptions further below)

RILM 1967-present; many countries; includes abstracts.
ProQuest Dissertations 1861-present; U.S. only; abstracts 1980-present (older abs are in print volumes in Babbidge Library). Includes full text of some dissertations.
Doctoral Dissertations in Musicology (Web) Limited scope, but includes non-U.S. and pre-1969 dissertations. No abstracts.

Step 2. After you have a citation, use one of these options to procure a copy:

Option 1. See if ProQuest Dissertations has the dissertation in downloadable full text.

Option 2. Search HOMER to see if UConn owns the dissertation. (Search it as you would a book.) You can also check the Boston Library Consortium's Virtual Catalog (if so, the catalog has a request button).

Option 3. Use InterLibrary Loan to borrow the dissertation from another library. Find the dissertation in WorldCat, then use the "ILL" button to make a request, or fill in an online request form at Document Delivery / InterLibrary Loan (DD/ILL).

Option 4. Order your own copy at Online Dissertation Services (ProQuest, formerly UMI) or ProQuest Dissertations.

Option 5. If you think the library should own the dissertation, speak with the music librarian. Use DD/ILL in the meantime.

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UConn's Dissertations

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Databases Listing DissertationsAccess is restricted.  Click for more information.

See also "Database Shortcuts" on the navigation bar to the left.

  • ProQuest Dissertations (same as Dissertation Abstracts) -- Includes citations to two million dissertations (including about 28,000 music dissertations) from accredited U.S institutions since 1861. Selectively covers masters theses, Canadian dissertations, and European dissertations. Has abstracts for dissertations beginning July 1980 and masters theses beginning spring 1988. (This means that for pre-1980 dissertations, there are fewer keywords available for searching; it may be harder to find a dissertation if the title is not descriptive.) To read abstracts for pre-1980 dissertations, note the DA number and year, then go to the print version of Dissertation Abstracts at Z 5055.U5 A53 Babbidge Stacks. This subscription database is updated monthly and has a robust search engine.
PROQUEST'S FULL TEXT DISSERTATIONS ONLINE:

NOTE: when you search ProQuest Dissertations, you are searching ONLY the citations, subject descriptors, and abstracts (if included). You are NOT searching the full text of dissertations.

UConn dissertations: ProQuest includes descriptions back to 1965, and provides the full text for most UConn dissertations completed after 1996. Occasionally, ProQuest has full text for pre-1997 UConn dissertations if someone somewhere (generally overseas) asked that the dissertation be scanned. UConn has not signed up for the "Retro Project" in which ProQuest scans dissertations prior to 1997.

Other dissertations: ProQuest has more than 600,000 dissertations available for immediate download by members of the UConn community. Some of these go rather far back in time. If you do not find the dissertation online, see how to get a dissertation (step 2).

  • Music Index. Includes citations from Dissertation Abstracts (Music Index considers DA to be a musicology journal). The Music Index may be useful for finding applied topics that might not appear in RILM. It is also useful for "one-stop shopping," at least from 1977ff. Still, because dissertation titles are very descriptive, and MI's subject headings seem to be drawn from the titles, there may not be a great advantage to using MI over DA. TIP: If you find dissertation citations in the Music Index, search them again in DA to try to find the full text and/or abstract, or to get the DA number for some interlibrary loan requests. Note: the print volumes of Music Index (going back to 1949) also include dissertation citations. Use DA or another dissertation source for dissertations written before 1949.
  • New Grove Online or in print. The bibliographies at the end of each article contain citations to dissertations.
  • RILM Includes citations and abstracts to scholarly music dissertations back to 1967. See Dissertation Abstracts Notes (PDF) for comparison between RILM and Dissertation Abstracts.
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Dissertation Web Sites

Dissertation Abstracts omits a good number of non-U.S. dissertations, so consult the following resources if you need a more international view of scholarship in your research area.

Archive of Dissertation Abstracts in Music (ADAM) (maintained by Geoffrey Chew). Indexes and abstracts 186 dissertations (complete or in process). Half are from Europe and other worldwide locations. This resource may be handy if the desired dissertation is not in Dissertation Abstracts and is not abstracted in DDM below.

Center for Research Libraries's (CRL) Quick Search Page. The CRL collects non-U.S. dissertations. Look for "foreign" dissertations in CRL's catalog and in its now defunct foreign dissertations database. As a member of CRL, UConn can borrow dissertations for its faculty, students, and staff.

DDM: Doctoral Dissertations in Musicology Online (Indiana). Good for identifying over 13,000 music dissertations from institutions outside the U.S. (which Dissertation Abstracts often excludes), plus those written before 1969 (pre-RILM). Also includes some "in-process" dissertations. Does not have abstracts, and has only very basic search tools (Dissertation Abstracts and RILM are better), but allows user to browse by musical period.

DMS (Dissertationsmeldestelle der Gesellschaft für Musikforschung). Musicology dissertations submitted in Austria, Switzerland and the German Federal Republic, with occasional entries from other European countries, and including doctoral dissertations in music education since 1998.

Doctoral Dissertations in Music Theory, see MTO Dissertations Index below.

EDT Digital Library (Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations (NDLTD)) provides access to electronic full text of hundreds of theses and dissertations from over eighty universities/libraries worldwide.

Foreign Doctoral Dissertations -- The Center for Research Libraries (of which UConn is a member) holds 750,000 foreign doctoral dissertations; many remain uncataloged, so contact CRL via this link for further inquiries.

Index to Theses in Great Britain and Ireland. Titles and abstracts; site registration necessary for access, but a limited free demo is available.

MTO Dissertations Index. Announcements that have appeared in Music Theory Online (Society for Music Theory) of approximately 260 completed dissertations dealing with music theory (mostly 1991 or later), including many non-U.S. dissertations that do not appear in Dissertation Abstracts. Includes abstracts and occasional tables of contents. List is sortable; otherwise, there is no search engine; the Google search includes the entire MTO site. Keywords are not standardized.

TheseNet (including free access to all French theses on music since 1972; abstracts are available) is no longer available. Instead try SUDOC or Système universitaire de documentation (union catalog of French libraries that includes theses) or Fichier central des thèses (doctoral theses in progress).

Search Google for other dissertation Web resources and initiatives.

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Other Resources Listing Music Dissertations

Print and electronic reference resources often list dissertations that predate the databases above. They may also have evaluative comments and context not found in the databases. Here are starting points:

  • Bibliographies on your topic. Consult print subject bibliographies on composers, styles, instruments, etc. These have citations to dissertations. To find bibliographies, do a HOMER Subject Heading search on your composer/topic and look for the subheading "Bibliographies." Also try a Keyword search on the words dissertations [keyword] [keyword], e.g., dissertations music education.
  • General music bibliographies. Consult bibliographies of music dissertations, such as Rita Mead's Doctoral Dissertations in American Music: A Classified Bibliography (1978). To find them, do an Advanced Search in HOMER (type music dissertations, then select Subject Keywords in the "Search In" menu).
  • Duckles. The index in Duckles's Music Reference and Research Materials: An Annotated Bibliography (ML 113 D83 1997 Music Ref.) lists several print resources that can help you identify dissertations.

  • Bibliographies in books and articles. These often contain citations to dissertations. Don't forget that JSTOR allows you to search the full text of articles, including their bibliographies (these often contain citations to dissertations).

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This page was found at http://www.lib.uconn.edu/music/dissertations.html.