Jewish Identities mounts a formidable challenge to prevailing essentialist assumptions about "Jewish music," which maintain that ethnic groups, nations, or religious communities possess an essence that must manifest itself in art created by members of that group. Klára Móricz scrutinizes concepts of
Jewish Identities: Nationalism, Racism, and Utopianism in Twentieth-Century Music
✍ Scribed by Klara Moricz
- Publisher
- University of California Press
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 456
- Series
- California Studies in 20th-Century Music; 8
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Jewish Identities mounts a formidable challenge to prevailing essentialist assumptions about "Jewish music," which maintain that ethnic groups, nations, or religious communities possess an essence that must manifest itself in art created by members of that group. Klára Móricz scrutinizes concepts of Jewish identity and reorders ideas about twentieth-century "Jewish music" in three case studies: first, Russian Jewish composers of the first two decades of the twentieth century; second, the Swiss American Ernest Bloch; and third, Arnold Schoenberg. Examining these composers in the context of emerging Jewish nationalism, widespread racial theories, and utopian tendencies in modernist art and twentieth-century politics, Móricz describes a trajectory from paradigmatic nationalist techniques, through assumptions about the unintended presence of racial essences, to an abstract notion of Judaism.
✦ Table of Contents
Contents
List Of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Note On Transliteration
Introduction
Part I. Jewish Nationalism à la Russe: The Society for Jewish Folk Music
1. “Trifles of Jewish Music”
2. Zhidï and Yevrei in a Neonationalist Context
Part II. Man’s Most Dangerous Myth: Ernest Bloch and Racial Thought
3. Racial Mystique: Anti-Semitism and Ernest Bloch’s Theories of Art
4. Denied and Accepted Stereotypes: From Jézabel to Schelomo
5. The Confines of Judaism and the Elusiveness of Universality: The Sacred Service
Part III. Utopias/Dystopias: Arnold Schoenberg’s Spiritual Judaism
6. Uneasy Parallels: From German Nationalism to Jewish Utopia
7. Torsos and Abstractions: “Music in Its Promised Land”
8. On the Ashes of the Holocaust: Anxiety, Abstraction, and Schoenberg’s Rhetoric of Fear
9. A Taste for “the Things of Heaven”: Cleansing Music of Politics
Postscript: “Castle Of Purity”
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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