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Representing the Good Neighbor - Music, Difference, and the Pan American Dream (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,511
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Representing the Good Neighbor - Music, Difference, and the Pan American Dream (Hardcover)
Series: Currents in Latin American and Iberian Music
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In Representing the Good Neighbor, Carol A. Hess investigates the
reception of Latin American art music in the US during the Pan
American movement of the 1930s and 40s. An amalgamation of
economic, political and cultural objectives, Pan Americanism was
premised on the idea that the Americas were bound by geography,
common interests, and a shared history, and stressed the
psychological and spiritual bonds between the North and South.
Threatened by European Fascism, the US government wholeheartedly
embraced this movement as a way of recruiting Latin American
countries as political partners. In a concerted effort to promote a
sameness-embracing attitude between the US and Latin America, it
established, in collaboration with entities such as the Pan
American Union, exchange programs for US and Latin American
composers as well as a series of contests, music education
projects, and concerts dedicated to Latin American music. Through
comparisons of the work of three of the most prominent Latin
American composers of the period - Carlos Chavez, Heitor
Villa-Lobos and Alberto Ginastera - Hess shows that the resulting
explosion of Latin American music in the US during the 30s and 40s
was accompanied by a widespread - though by no means universal -
embracement by critics as an exemplar of cosmopolitan universalism.
Aspects shared between the music of US composers and that of their
neighbors to the south were often touted and applauded. Yet, by the
end of the Cold War period, critics had reverted to viewing Latin
American music through the lens of difference and exoticism. In
comparing these radically different modes of reception, Hess
uncovers how and why attitudes towards Latin American music shifted
so dramatically during the middle of the twentieth century, and
what this tells us about the ways in which the history of American
music has been written. As the first book to examine in detail the
critical reception of Latin American music in the United States,
Representing the Good Neighbor promises to be a landmark in the
field of American music studies, and will be essential reading for
students and scholars of music in the US and Latin America during
the twentieth-century. It will also appeal to historians studying
US-Latin America relations, as well as general readers interested
in the history of American music.
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