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Music and the Environment in Dystopian Narrative: Sounding the
Disaster investigates the active role of music in film and fiction
portraying climate crisis. From contemporary science fiction and
environmental film to "Anthropocene opera," the most arresting
eco-narratives draw less on background music than on the power of
sound to move fictional action and those who receive it. Beginning
with a reflection on a Mozart recording on the 1970s' Voyager
Golden Record, this book explores links between music and violence
in Lidia Yuknavitch's 2017 novel The Book of Joan, songless speech
in the opera Persephone in the Late Anthropocene, interrupted
lyricism in the eco-documentary Expedition to the End of the World,
and dread-inducing hurricane music in the Brecht-Weill opera Rise
and Fall of the City of Mahagonny. In all of these works, music
allows for a state of critical vulnerability in its hearers,
communicating planetary crisis in an embodied way.
Traces Eisler's art songs through the political crises of the
twentieth century, presenting them as a way to intervene in the
nationalist appropriation of aesthetic material. Best known for his
collaborations with Bertolt Brecht, composer Hanns Eisler also set
nineteenth-century German poetry to music that both absorbs and
disturbs the Lieder tradition. This book traces Eisler's art songs
(German: Kunstlieder) through twentieth-century political crises
from World War I to Nazi-era exile and from Eisler's postwar
deportation from the US to the ideological pressures he faced in
the early German Democratic Republic. His artsongs are presented
not as an escape from the "dark times" Brecht lamented but rather
as a way to intervene in the nationalist appropriation of aesthetic
material. The book follows a chronological arc from Eisler's early
Morgenstern songs to his Lied-like setting of Brecht's 1939 "To
Those Who Come After" and his treatment of Hoelderlin's poetry in
the 1940s Hollywood Songbook; the final two chapters focus on
Eisler's Goethe settings in the early GDR, followed by his late
Serious Songs recalling Brahms in their reflective approach. In its
combination of textual and musicological analysis, this book
balances technical and lay vocabulary to reach readers with or
without musical background. The author's practical perspective as a
singer also informs the book, as she addresses not only what Eisler
asks of the voice but also the challenge of evoking both intimacy
and distance in his politically fraught art songs. Heidi Hart holds
a PhD in German Studies from Duke University. She is an instructor
in the College of Humanities and Social Sciences at Utah State
University.
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