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Modernist Mysteries: Persephone (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,705
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Modernist Mysteries: Persephone (Hardcover)
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Modernist Mysteries: Persephone is a landmark study that will move
the field of musicology in important new directions. The book
presents a microhistorical analysis of the premiere of the
melodrama Persephone at the Paris Opera on April 30th, 1934,
engaging with the collaborative, transnational nature of the
production. Author Tamara Levitz demonstrates how these
collaborators-- Igor Stravinsky, Andre Gide, Jacques Copeau, and
Ida Rubinstein, among others-used the myth of Persephone to perform
and articulate their most deeply held beliefs about four topics
significant to modernism: religion, sexuality, death, and
historical memory in art. In investigating the aesthetic and
political consequences of the artists' diverging perspectives, and
the fall-out of their titanic clash on the theater stage, Levitz
dismantles myths about neoclassicism as a musical style. The result
is a revisionary account of modernism in music in the 1930s.
As a result of its focus on the collaborative performance, this
book differs from traditional accounts of musical modernism and
neoclassicism in several ways. First and foremost, it centers on
the performance of modernism, highlighting the theatrical,
performative, and sensual. Levitz places Christianity in the center
of the discussion, and questions the national distinctions common
in modernist research by involving a transnational team of
collaborators. She further breaks new ground in shifting the focus
from "history" to "memory" by emphasizing the commemorative nature
of neoclassic listening rituals over the historicist stylization of
its scores, and contends that modernists captured on stage and in
philosophical argument their simultaneous need and inability to
mourn the past. The book as a whole counters the common criticism
that neoclassicism was a "reactionary" musical style by suggesting
a more pluralistic, ambivalent, and sometimes even progressive
politics, and reconnects musical neoclassicism with a queer
classicist tradition extending from Winckelmann through Walter
Pater to Gide. Modernist Mysteries concludes that 1930s modernists
understood neoclassicism not as formalist compositional approaches
but rather as a vitalist art haunted by ghosts of the past and
promissory visions of the future."
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