Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Chapter 8 BÉRANGER’S NAPOLEONIC SONGS Mourning, Memory, and the Future
-
Sophie-Anne Leterrier
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- TABLES viii
- FOREWORD ix
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xiii
- Introduction TOWARD A MUSICAL APPROACH TO POSTWAR TRANSITIONS 1
-
Part I. Reconstructing the Music World
- Chapter 1 TRANSITIONING FROM THE TURMOIL THROUGH MUSIC Withdrawal, Patriotism, Sublimation: Georges Bizet in the Early 1870s 19
- Chapter 2 REVOLUTIONARY MUSIC FROM WAR TO PEACE Mexico, 1910s–1930s 39
- Chapter 3 FIRST CONCERTS ON THE INTERNATIONAL STAGE The British Comebacks of the Vienna and Berlin Philharmonics in 1947/48 54
-
Part II A GRADUAL DEMOBILIZATION: MUSIC, CULTURES OF WAR, AND NATIONAL IMAGINATIONS
- Chapter 4 DISCOURSE ON MUSIC AND THE POSTWAR TRANSITION The Case of France after the Franco-Prussian Conflict of 1870–1871 81
- Chapter 5 SINGING ABOUT THE FORMER ENEMY Two Postwar Transition Periods Seen through the Lens of the Café-Concert and Music Hall Chanson, 1871–1923 102
- Chapter 6 WAR OF TASTE IN POPULAR AND FOLK MUSIC French Chanson, 1940–1942 121
- Chapter 7 POSTWAR TRANSITIONS AND USES OF MUSIC IN A CENTRAL EUROPEAN BORDERLAND REGION Tyrol and the Aftermath of Two World Wars, 1900–2010s 137
-
Part III MEMORY, MOURNING, AND COMMEMORATION
- Chapter 8 BÉRANGER’S NAPOLEONIC SONGS Mourning, Memory, and the Future 157
- Chapter 9 “WILL WE RETURN UNSCATHED?” Paul Hindemith’s Minimax and the Trauma of War 179
- Chapter 10 THE CONSTRUCTION OF A TRANSATLANTIC REPERTOIRE OF RESISTANCE AND MOURNING IN THE POSTWAR YEARS Sources Collected by Shmerke Kaczerginski (Vilna, New York, Buenos Aires) 194
- Chapter 11 SINGING THE UNSPEAKABLE IN RWANDA IN THE SUMMER OF 1994 Music in the Context of the Genocidal Abyss through a Portrait of the Artist 208
-
Part IV MUSIC FOR PEACE AND RECONCILIATION?
- Chapter 12 PEACEMAKING AND FESTIVITIES AT THE CONGRESS OF PARIS, 1856 227
- Chapter 13 INTERNATIONALISM AND MUSICAL EXCHANGE IN POST–WORLD WAR I EUROPE, 1918–1923 246
- Chapter 14 MUSIC: A WEAPON FOR PEACE? The United States, UNESCO, and the Creation of the International Music Council, 1945–1953 271
- Afterword SURVIVAL, DESIRE, EMPOWERMENT, AND THE ABSENCE OF WORDS Music in Postwar Transitions, 1800–1950 290
- INDEX 299
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- TABLES viii
- FOREWORD ix
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xiii
- Introduction TOWARD A MUSICAL APPROACH TO POSTWAR TRANSITIONS 1
-
Part I. Reconstructing the Music World
- Chapter 1 TRANSITIONING FROM THE TURMOIL THROUGH MUSIC Withdrawal, Patriotism, Sublimation: Georges Bizet in the Early 1870s 19
- Chapter 2 REVOLUTIONARY MUSIC FROM WAR TO PEACE Mexico, 1910s–1930s 39
- Chapter 3 FIRST CONCERTS ON THE INTERNATIONAL STAGE The British Comebacks of the Vienna and Berlin Philharmonics in 1947/48 54
-
Part II A GRADUAL DEMOBILIZATION: MUSIC, CULTURES OF WAR, AND NATIONAL IMAGINATIONS
- Chapter 4 DISCOURSE ON MUSIC AND THE POSTWAR TRANSITION The Case of France after the Franco-Prussian Conflict of 1870–1871 81
- Chapter 5 SINGING ABOUT THE FORMER ENEMY Two Postwar Transition Periods Seen through the Lens of the Café-Concert and Music Hall Chanson, 1871–1923 102
- Chapter 6 WAR OF TASTE IN POPULAR AND FOLK MUSIC French Chanson, 1940–1942 121
- Chapter 7 POSTWAR TRANSITIONS AND USES OF MUSIC IN A CENTRAL EUROPEAN BORDERLAND REGION Tyrol and the Aftermath of Two World Wars, 1900–2010s 137
-
Part III MEMORY, MOURNING, AND COMMEMORATION
- Chapter 8 BÉRANGER’S NAPOLEONIC SONGS Mourning, Memory, and the Future 157
- Chapter 9 “WILL WE RETURN UNSCATHED?” Paul Hindemith’s Minimax and the Trauma of War 179
- Chapter 10 THE CONSTRUCTION OF A TRANSATLANTIC REPERTOIRE OF RESISTANCE AND MOURNING IN THE POSTWAR YEARS Sources Collected by Shmerke Kaczerginski (Vilna, New York, Buenos Aires) 194
- Chapter 11 SINGING THE UNSPEAKABLE IN RWANDA IN THE SUMMER OF 1994 Music in the Context of the Genocidal Abyss through a Portrait of the Artist 208
-
Part IV MUSIC FOR PEACE AND RECONCILIATION?
- Chapter 12 PEACEMAKING AND FESTIVITIES AT THE CONGRESS OF PARIS, 1856 227
- Chapter 13 INTERNATIONALISM AND MUSICAL EXCHANGE IN POST–WORLD WAR I EUROPE, 1918–1923 246
- Chapter 14 MUSIC: A WEAPON FOR PEACE? The United States, UNESCO, and the Creation of the International Music Council, 1945–1953 271
- Afterword SURVIVAL, DESIRE, EMPOWERMENT, AND THE ABSENCE OF WORDS Music in Postwar Transitions, 1800–1950 290
- INDEX 299