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The Oxford Handbook of The American Musical offers new and
cutting-edge essays on the most important and compelling issues and
topics in the growing, interdisciplinary field of musical-theater
and film-musical studies. Taking the form of a "keywords" book, it
introduces readers to the concepts and terms that define the
history of the musical as a genre and that offer ways to reflect on
the specific creative choices that shape musicals and their
performance on stage and screen. The handbook offers a
cross-section of essays written by leading experts in the field,
organized within broad conceptual groups, which together capture
the breadth, direction, and tone of musicals studies today.
Each essay traces the genealogy of the term or issue it addresses,
including related issues and controversies, positions and
problematizes those issues within larger bodies of scholarship, and
provides specific examples drawn from shows and films. Essays both
re-examine traditional topics and introduce underexplored areas.
Reflecting the concerns of scholars and students alike, the authors
emphasize critical and accessible perspectives, and supplement
theory with concrete examples that may be accessed through links to
the handbook's website.
Taking into account issues of composition, performance, and
reception, the book's contributors bring a wide range of practical
and theoretical perspectives to bear on their considerations of one
of America's most lively, enduring artistic traditions. The Oxford
Handbook of The AmericanMusical will engage all readers interested
in the form, from students to scholars to fans and aficionados, as
it analyses the complex relationships among the creators,
performers, and audiences who sustain the genre.
Issues of identity have always been central to the American musical
in all its guises. Who appears in musicals, who or what they are
meant to represent, and how, over time, those representations have
been understood and interpreted, provide the very basis for our
engagement with the genre. In this third volume of the reissued
Oxford Handbook of the American Musical, chapters focus on race,
ethnicity, gender, and sexuality, regional vs. national identity,
and the cultural and class significance of the musical itself. As
important as the question of who appears in musicals are the
questions of who watches and listens to them, and of how specific
cultures of reception attend differently to the musical. Chapters
thus address cultural codes inherent to the genre, in particular
those found in traditional school theater programs.
For the past several years, the American musical has continued to
thrive by reflecting and shaping cultural values and social norms,
and even commenting on politics, whether directly and on a national
scale (Hamilton) or somewhat more obliquely and on a more intimate
scale (Fun Home). New stage musicals, such as Come from Away and
The Band's Visit, open on Broadway every season, challenging
conventions of form and content, and revivals offer audiences a
different perspective on extant shows (Carousel; My Fair Lady).
Television musicals broadcast live hearken back to 1950s
television's affection for musical theatre and aim to attract new
audiences through the accessibility of television. Film musicals,
including Les Miserables and Into the Woods, capitalize on the
medium's technical capabilities of perspective and point of view,
as well as visual spectacle. Television has embraced the genre
anew, and with unexpected gusto, not only devising musical episodes
for countless dramatic and comedy series, but also generating
musical series such as Galavant and Crazy Ex-Girlfriend. And
animated musicals, such as Disney's Moana, hail child and adult
audiences with their dual messages, vibrant visual vocabulary, and
hummable music. The chapters gathered in this book, Volume II of
the reissued Oxford Handbook, explore the American musical from the
various media in which musicals have been created to the different
components of a musical and the people who do the work to bring a
musical to life.
The American musical is a paradox. On stage or screen, musicals at
once hold a dominant and a contested place in the worlds of
entertainment, art, and scholarship. Born from a melange of
performance forms that included opera and operetta, vaudeville and
burlesque, minstrelsy and jazz, musicals have always sought to
amuse more than instruct, and to make money more than make
political change. In spite of their unapologetic commercialism,
though, musicals have achieved supreme artistry and have influenced
culture as much as if not more than any other art form in America,
including avant-garde and high art on the one hand, and the full
range of popular and commercial art on the other. Reflecting,
refracting, and shaping U.S. culture since the early twentieth
century, musicals converse with shifting dynamics of gender and
sexuality, ethnicity and race, and the very question of what it
means to be American and to be human. The chapters gathered in this
book, Volume I of the reissued Oxford Handbook, explore the
American musical from both the outside and the inside. This first
volume concentrates in particular on large-scale, more
philosophical issues of relevance to the genre, considering issues
of historical situations and formal procedure as they bear on the
narratives we make concerning productions and performers, artists
and audiences, commerce and context. The first four essays discuss
ways of defining histories and texts, and apprehending the formal
choices of singers and dancers; the second group of four take up
the subtle challenges of the genre's signal transformations out of
minstrelsy and Tin Pan Alley to "integration" and beyond.
How can we account for the persistent appeal of glossy commercial
pop music? Why do certain performers have such emotional power,
even though their music is considered vulgar or second rate? In
"The Persistence of Sentiment", Mitchell Morris gives a critical
account of a group of American popular music performers who have
dedicated fan bases and considerable commercial success despite the
critical disdain they have endured. Morris examines the specific
musical features of some exemplary pop songs and draws attention to
the social contexts that contributed to their popularity as well as
their dismissal. These artists were all members of more or less
disadvantaged social categories: members of racial or sexual
minorities, victims of class and gender prejudices, advocates of
populations excluded from the mainstream. The complicated
commercial world of pop music in the 1970s allowed the greater
promulgation of musical styles and idioms that spoke to and for
exactly those stigmatized audiences. In more recent years,
beginning with the "Seventies Revival" of the early 1990s,
additional perspectives and layers of interpretation have allowed
not only a deeper understanding of these songs' function than when
they were first popular, but also an appreciation of how their
significance has shifted for American listeners in the succeeding
three decades.
A short play about a dying ventriloquist and his last conversation
with his dummy.
The Oxford Handbook of The American Musical offers new and
cutting-edge essays on the most important and compelling issues and
topics in the growing, interdisciplinary field of musical-theater
and film-musical studies. Taking the form of a "keywords" book, it
introduces readers to the concepts and terms that define the
history of the musical as a genre and that offer ways to reflect on
the specific creative choices that shape musicals and their
performance on stage and screen. The handbook offers a
9780199973842 of essays written by leading experts in the field,
organized within broad conceptual groups, which together capture
the breadth, direction, and tone of musicals studies today. Each
essay traces the genealogy of the term or issue it addresses,
including related issues and controversies, positions and
problematizes those issues within larger bodies of scholarship, and
provides specific examples drawn from shows and films. Essays both
re-examine traditional topics and introduce underexplored areas.
Reflecting the concerns of scholars and students alike, the authors
emphasize critical and accessible perspectives, and supplement
theory with concrete examples that may be accessed through links to
the handbook's website. Taking into account issues of composition,
performance, and reception, the book's contributors bring a wide
range of practical and theoretical perspectives to bear on their
considerations of one of America's most lively, enduring artistic
traditions. The Oxford Handbook of The American Musical will engage
all readers interested in the form, from students to scholars to
fans and aficionados, as it analyses the complex relationships
among the creators, performers, and audiences who sustain the
genre.
Exploring the relationship between queer sexuality and music in the
late nineteenth and early twentieth century Queer Episodes in Music
and Modern Identity approaches modern sexuality by way of music.
Through the hidden or lost stories of composers, scholars, patrons,
performers, audiences, repertoires, venues, and specific works,
this intriguing volume explores points of intersection between
music and queerness in Europe and the United States in the years
1870 to 1950--a period when dramatic changes in musical expression
and in the expression of individual sexual identity played similar
roles in washing away the certainties of the past. Pursuing the
shadowy, obscured tracks of queerness, contributors unravel
connections among dissident identities and concrete aspects of
musical style, gestures, and personae. Contributors are Byron
Adams, Philip Brett, Malcolm Hamrick Brown, Sophie Fuller, Mitchell
Morris, Jann Pasler, Ivan Raykoff, Fiona Richards, Eva Rieger,
Gillian Rodger, Sherrie Tucker, and Lloyd Whitesell.
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