Fr. 80.00

Antonin Dvo%rak''s New World Symphony - Hardback

English · Hardback

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Description

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About the author

Douglas W. Shadle is Associate Professor of Musicology and Chair of the Department and Ethnomusicology at Vanderbilt University's Blair School of Music. He is the author of the award-winning Orchestrating the Nation: The Nineteenth-Century American Symphonic Enterprise.

Summary

Before Antonín Dvorák's New World Symphony became one of the most universally beloved pieces of classical music, it exposed the deep wounds of racism at the dawn of the Jim Crow era while serving as a flashpoint in broader debates about the American ideals of freedom and equality. Drawing from a diverse array of historical voices, author Douglas W. Shadle's richly textured account of the symphony's 1893 premiere shows that even the classical concert hall could not remain insulated from the country's racial politics.

Additional text

Can you talk about the New World Symphony without talking about race, cultural appropriation, and the challenges of defining 'American' classical music? Douglas Shadle's book, equally valuable for newcomers and for those who think they already know all about Dvorak's most popular work, views the genesis and reception of the piece through a new, clear lens that brings into focus some of the challenging questions that it continues to raise and that remain, in this field, too little discussed.

Product details

Authors Douglas W. Shadle, Douglas W. (Assistant Professor of Musicol Shadle
Publisher Oxford University Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 20.04.2021
 
EAN 9780190645625
ISBN 978-0-19-064562-5
No. of pages 208
Series Oxford Keynotes
Subject Humanities, art, music > Music > General, dictionaries

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