ABSTRACT

During the past two decades, there has emerged a growing need to reconsider the objects, axioms and perspectives of writing music history. A certain suspicion towards Francois Lyotard’s grand narratives, as a sign of what he diagnosed as our ’postmodern condition’, has become more or less an established and unquestioned point of departure among historians. This suspicion, at its most extreme, has led to a radical conclusion of the ’end of history’ in the work of postmodern scholars such as Jean Baudrillard and Francis Fukuyama. The contributors to Critical Music Historiography take a step back and argue that the radical view of the ’impossibility of history’, as well as the unavoidable ideology of any history, are counter-productive points of departure for historical scholarship. It is argued that metanarratives in history are still possible and welcome, even if their limitations are acknowledged. Foucault, Lyotard and others should be taken into account but systematized viewpoints and methods for a more critical and multi-faceted re-evaluation of the past through research are needed. As to the metanarratives of music history, they must avoid the pitfalls of evolutionism, hagiography, and teleology, all hallmarks of traditional historiography. In this volume the contributors put these methods and principles into practice. The chapters tackle under-researched and non-conventional domains of music history as well as rethinking older historiographical concepts such as orientalism and nationalism, and consequently introduce new concepts such as occidentalism and transnationalism. The volume is a challenging collection of work that stakes out a unique territory for itself among the growing body of work on critical music history.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part I|63 pages

Nationalism and Politics

chapter 3|12 pages

Writing Out the Nation in Academia

Ilmari Krohn and the National Context of the Beginnings of Musicology in Finland

chapter 4|10 pages

Beyond the National Gaze

Opera in Late 1870s Helsinki

part II|59 pages

Silenced and Sidetracked

chapter 6|12 pages

Music Historiography as a Braided River

The Case of New Zealand

chapter 7|16 pages

Colonial, Silenced, Forgotten

Exploring the Musical Life of German-Speaking Sarajevo in December 1913

chapter 8|16 pages

Seriously Popular

Deconstructing Popular Orchestral Repertoire in Late Nineteenth-Century Helsinki

part III|71 pages

Updating the Historiographical Concepts

part IV|51 pages

Probing Canons

chapter 15|12 pages

‘A Thing of the Past'

Canon Formation and the Postmodern Condition

chapter 16|12 pages

Gesualdo

Composer of the Twentieth Century