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Damascus Kafumbe

Edward C. Knox Professor of International Studies; Professor of Music
Middlebury College
he/him

Professor Damascus Kafumbe is an ethnomusicologist, teacher, performer, composer, producer, filmmaker, and instrument technician. He teaches ethnomusicology and performance courses, directs an African music and dance ensemble as well as an Afropop band, and maintains the college’s Ugandan musical instrument collection. Kafumbe previously directed the African Studies Program and served on various committees, including the International and Global Studies Program Steering Committee, the Faculty Strategy Committee, the Black Studies Steering Committee, and the Faculty Advisory Board for the Cameroon School. Kafumbe’s scholarly interests span diverse fields, including African studies, performance, history, philosophy, politics, ritual, spirituality, and social organization. He researches the royal court music of Buganda, and his books on the subject include Tuning the Kingdom: Kawuugulu Musical Performance, Storytelling, and Politics in Buganda (University of Rochester Press, 2018) and Power Relations in Court Song: Lyrical Meaning and Political Life in Uganda (University of Rochester Press, 2024). Kafumbe is also the director of the documentary film Drum Making as a Way of Life in Southern Uganda (Alexander Street Press, 2020). His professional service includes serving on the Ethnomusicology journal Editorial Board and the Society for Ethnomusicology Board of Directors. He is also the Music Book Review Editor of the Yearbook for Traditional Music journal and co-editor of the Eastman/Rochester Studies in Ethnomusicology series of the University of Rochester Press.