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Informationen zum Autor Alejandro L. Madrid is Assistant Professor of Latin American and Latino studies at the University of Illinois, Chicago. He is the author of Nor-tec Rifa! Electronic Dance Music from Tijuana to the World and co-editor (with Ignacio Corona) of Postnational Musical Identities. Cultural Production, Distribution, and Consumption in a Globalized Scenario. Klappentext How the relationships between avant-garde music and ideas of modernity in post-revolutionary Mexico shaped discourses of nationality Zusammenfassung Explores the development of modernist and avant-garde art music styles and aesthetics in Mexico in relation to the social and cultural changes that affected the country after the 1910-1920 revolution. Inhaltsverzeichnis Acknowledgements Introduction: History, Ideas, Musical Writing, and the Writing of Music 1. Modernism, Teleology, and Identity: Toward a Cultural Understanding of Julian Carillo's Sonodo 13 2. The Avant-Garde as a Site of Identification: Style and Ideology in Carlos Chavez's Early Music 3. Manuel M. Ponce, from Nineteenth-Century Modernismo to Twentieth-Century Modernism 4. The Sounds of the Nation, Modernity, and Tradition: The First National Congress of Music as Synecdoche of Discourses 5. Porfirian Music in Revolutionary Times: Atzimba and the Imagination of "the Indigenous" 6. Ideas, Canon, Revolution, and Places in History: Carlos Chavez and His Relationships with Julian Carrillo and Manual M. Ponce Notes Bibliography Index