Theorizing Trauma and Music in the Long Nineteenth Century

IF 0.2 3区 艺术学 0 MUSIC
M. Meinhart, Jillian C. Rogers
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Investigations of how people have used music to represent, perform, enact and cope with trauma have proliferated in the last decade, although these have often focused on post-World War II musicians and musical phenomena. This work has engaged various methodologies and drawn on myriad bodies of trauma theory in order to better understand the relationships between music and trauma for Holocaust survivors, Cold War- and glasnost-era Eastern European musicians and civilians and soldiers in Iraq. However, despite the growing interest in trauma within music scholarship, scant attention has been paid to relationships between musical phenomena and trauma prior to World War II. And yet, the wars, revolutions, forced displacement, slavery and imperialism of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries make these years some of the most violent in the histories of modern Europe and the Americas, and thus some of the most important to address when asking questions regarding relationships between music and trauma. In this special issue's introductory essay, we consider why pre-twentieth century musicians and repertoires have historically not been addressed in scholarly literature. In so doing, we outline the aims of the issue; review relevant literature in musicology and trauma studies; discuss the benefits and challenges of applying trauma theory to nineteenth-century music and musicians and provide readers with information on this special issue's collaborative history. Although giving readers a fleshed-out overview of trauma studies from the nineteenth century to present is outside the scope of this article, this introduction nevertheless provides enough background on the status and main ideas of trauma research from the mid-nineteenth century to present day to facilitate comprehension of how the research showcased in this special issue relates to social, historical and political conceptions of trauma.
论19世纪漫长的创伤与音乐
在过去的十年里,对人们如何使用音乐来表现、表演、表演和应对创伤的调查激增,尽管这些调查往往集中在二战后的音乐家和音乐现象上。这项工作采用了各种方法,并借鉴了无数创伤理论,以便更好地理解音乐与大屠杀幸存者、冷战和开放时代的东欧音乐家以及伊拉克平民和士兵的创伤之间的关系。然而,尽管音乐学术界对创伤越来越感兴趣,但在第二次世界大战之前,人们很少关注音乐现象和创伤之间的关系。然而,十九世纪末和二十世纪初的战争、革命、被迫流离失所、奴隶制和帝国主义使这些年成为现代欧洲和美洲历史上最暴力的几年,因此也是在询问音乐与创伤之间关系时最重要的几年。在本期特刊的介绍性文章中,我们思考了为什么20世纪前的音乐家和曲目在学术文献中历来没有被提及。在这样做的过程中,我们概述了这个问题的目的;回顾音乐学和创伤研究的相关文献;讨论将创伤理论应用于19世纪音乐和音乐家的好处和挑战,并为读者提供本特刊合作历史的信息。尽管让读者对19世纪至今的创伤研究有一个更丰富的概述超出了本文的范围,但这篇引言提供了关于19世纪中期至今创伤研究现状和主要思想的足够背景,有助于理解本特刊中展示的研究如何与社会、,创伤的历史和政治观念。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
66.70%
发文量
58
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