ABSTRACT

This significant volume moves music-historical research in the direction of deconstructing the national grand narratives in music history, of challenging the national paradigm in methodology, and thinking anew about cultural traffic, cultural transfer and cosmopolitanism in the musical past. The chapters of this book confront, or subject to some kind of critique, assumptions about the importance of the national in the musical past. The emphasis, therefore, is not so much on how national culture has been constructed, or how national cultural institutions have influenced musical production, but, rather, on the way the national has been challenged by musical practices or audience reception.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

part 1|76 pages

Confronting the national

chapter 1|14 pages

Cosmopolitan musicology

chapter 3|15 pages

The migrant and the nation

Hanns Eisler and German identity

chapter 4|14 pages

The travelling musician as cosmopolitan

Western performers and composers in mid-nineteenth-century St Petersburg and Moscow

chapter 5|13 pages

Communist nationalisms, internationalisms, and cosmopolitanisms

The case of the German Democratic Republic

part 2|60 pages

Confronting national institutions

chapter 6|17 pages

Listening together

Aurality and the everyday in Riga before the Shoah

chapter 7|14 pages

Two men averting the gaze from the fatherland

Ilmari Krohn and Armas Launis as cosmopolitan musicologists in early twentieth-century Finland

chapter 8|14 pages

National phonography in the musical past

Empire, archive, and overlapping musical migrations in Britain

chapter 9|13 pages

Electroacoustic mythmaking

National grand narratives in electroacoustic music

part 3|57 pages

Confronting national stereotypes

chapter 10|14 pages

Learning music in the social jungle

Young performers’ method books in the postwar USA and de-Germanized Finland

chapter 11|16 pages

Liberté, Egalité, and Lutherie

Fetishizing Stradivarius in the context of French nationalism 1

chapter 12|13 pages

‘Cantor of the enduring human heart’

Wagner in the Parisian press, 1933

chapter 13|12 pages

Territory is the key

A look at the birth of ‘national music’ in Spain (1799–1803)