Michiko Toyama Disrupts the Historiography of Modernism

IF 0.5 2区 艺术学 0 MUSIC
BRIGID COHEN
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract The Paris-trained, Japanese composer Michiko Toyama (1913–2006) was appointed as the earliest foreign-born visiting composer at the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center (CPEMC), the first institutionally supported studio of its kind in the United States. Yet she remains virtually unknown to scholarship, despite a growing literature on women pioneers in electronic music. Drawing on interviews, archival research, and the interpretive study of music, this article studies the conditions under which Toyama has found little remembrance to date; and it conceptualizes Toyama's own ideas of modernity formulated over the massive cultural and geographical dislocations of her lifetime. Within an intensely lyrical compositional practice, Toyama thematized hallmarks of traditional modernism studies: self-reflexivity, estrangement, exile, and exoticism. Racist criticism during her lifetime dismissed her music as a belated mimicry of Western models. Yet the modernist qualities and themes of her work emerge as a consequence of her life lived in intercultural contact zones of uprooting – the very conditions that make ideas of the ‘modern’ possible.
富山美智子颠覆现代主义的史学
毕业于巴黎的日本作曲家富山美智子(1913-2006)被任命为哥伦比亚-普林斯顿电子音乐中心(CPEMC)最早的外籍访问作曲家,该中心是美国首个由机构支持的电子音乐工作室。然而,尽管关于电子音乐女性先驱的文献越来越多,但学术界对她几乎一无所知。本文通过访谈、档案研究和音乐的解释性研究,研究了富山至今几乎没有找到记忆的情况;它将富山自己对现代性的看法概念化,这些观点是在她一生中经历的大规模文化和地理错位中形成的。在强烈抒情的创作实践中,富山将传统现代主义研究的特征:自我反思、隔阂、流亡和异国情调化为主题。在她的一生中,种族主义者批评她的音乐是对西方模式的迟来的模仿。然而,她的作品的现代主义特质和主题是她在跨文化交流的连根拔起的地区生活的结果——正是这种条件使“现代”的想法成为可能。
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CiteScore
0.70
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发文量
32
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