内战中的团乐队

W. Rosengren
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This is so because all role performances are less scripted than in the urban/organized world, and there is greater latitude for self-expression. Moreover, in the prismatic world appearances are poor guidelines to behavior. In short, things may seldom be what they seem in a prismatic society. Thus, when Robert E. Lee referred to his Union foes as \"Those people\" rather than as \"the enemy\" it was more than just a Southern gentleman speaking, and his remark did not mean he was inclined to kill fewer Yankees. Lee was merely speaking prismatically. On the other hand, when Sherman said, \"I will make Georgia howl,\" he meant precisely that. Similarly, when a thirteen year old bugle boy, who had been shot in the head with an arrow, shot the Indian who put it there and took his scalp, it was more than a kid playing cowboy and Indian. Likewise, when a Confederate Band marched onto the battlefield at Gettysburg and entertained friend and foe with waltzes, polkas and two-- steps, it was not a crazy impulse, it was prismatic behavior (Leinbach). During pauses in battles, Yankee and Rebel Bands would gather on opposite sides of a river and engage in \"battles of the Bands\" after which they swapped coffee, sugar, tobacco, etc. moving the goodies back and forth on little sail boats made for the occasion (Furgurson). In the prismatic world, any situation can be easily and quickly redefined as something quite different from what it started out to be. Thus, enemies can suddenly become friends, lines of advancing and defending troops can become an audience, a child can become a ruthless killer, all set to the music of a Regimental Band. In prismatic communities, the main differentiations are between the very young and very old, and between males and females. Children are but miniaturized versions of larger people and act as if they were grown-ups, just as in the cases of the thirteen year old scalper; or the little girls who helped their mother, Rose Greenhow, in the business of espionage; or twelve year old Fred Grant (later a General himself), who tagged along with his Dad, Ulysses, as he battled Rebel armies. At the visual level, consider the prismatic little people in Images 1 and 2. …","PeriodicalId":134380,"journal":{"name":"Journal of American & Comparative Cultures","volume":"79 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2001-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Regimental Bands in the Civil War\",\"authors\":\"W. 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引用次数: 2

摘要

行进铜管乐队在南北战争时期是音乐舞台上的新事物,他们的表演方式似乎很奇怪,与我们的时代格格不入。那个时代的铜管乐队是“棱镜”社会向“城市/工业”社会巨大转变的一部分。棱镜社会类似于实际的棱镜。就像棱镜稍微旋转一下,一种新的颜色就会出现一样,在一个棱柱形的社会里,个人的行为也会发生变化,而不考虑所处的局势或他人的期望。这是一个充满互动惊喜的世界。生活在这样一种文化中的人们根本不受角色分割的影响,而角色分割使生活在现代复杂的官僚化社会中变得可以忍受。所有这一切都意味着棱柱形人在扮演什么角色以及如何扮演角色方面享有广泛的选择。正是南北战争时代的这种多棱镜环境的特征反映在那个时期的乐队和音乐家的文化和行为中,其中文化是一个万花筒,可以突然呈现不同的形状和内容。南方仍然植根于这个“棱镜”阶段(Rip-2s)。北方在通往现代化的道路上走得更远,尽管它也保留了很多棱柱形的气质。在棱柱形社会中,社会制度是重叠的:家庭规范与政治习俗、经济与宗教等等混杂在一起。在其中,个人行为是不稳定的,不稳定的——从一种制度表达迅速转移到另一种制度表达。在这些短暂的过渡时期,人们摆脱了“民间”社会所要求的令人窒息的一致性,但还没有受到现代组织社会中出现的约束。棱柱形环境的影响可以反映在文化的各个方面,包括乐队和音乐。这是因为所有的角色表演都不像在城市/有组织的世界中那样照本不动,而且有更大的自我表达空间。此外,在棱镜世界中,外表并不能很好地指导行为。简而言之,在一个棱柱形的社会里,事物可能很少像它们看起来的那样。因此,当罗伯特·e·李把他的联邦敌人称为“那些人”而不是“敌人”时,这不仅仅是一位南方绅士在说话,他的话并不意味着他倾向于少杀一些北方佬。李只是在说话。另一方面,当谢尔曼说"我要让佐治亚嚎叫"时,他的意思正是这个。同样,当一个13岁的吹号男孩被箭射中头部,射杀了那个把箭放在那里并拿走他头皮的印第安人,这不仅仅是一个孩子在玩牛仔和印第安人的游戏。同样,当南方邦联乐队进军葛底斯堡战场,用华尔兹、波尔卡和两步舞招待朋友和敌人时,这不是一种疯狂的冲动,而是一种棱镜般的行为(莱因巴赫)。在战争暂停期间,北方佬和叛军会聚集在河的两边,进行“叛军之战”,之后他们交换咖啡、糖、烟草等,在专门为这种场合制造的小帆船上来回移动好东西(弗格森)。在棱柱形的世界里,任何情况都可以很容易、很快地被重新定义为与开始时完全不同的情况。因此,敌人可以突然变成朋友,前进和防守的部队可以成为观众,一个孩子可以成为无情的杀手,所有这些都伴随着军团乐队的音乐。在棱柱形群落中,主要的区别在于非常年轻和非常年老,以及男性和女性之间。孩子不过是大人的缩小版,他们的行为举止就像大人一样,就像那个十三岁的黄牛一样;或者帮助母亲罗斯·格林豪从事间谍活动的小女孩;还有12岁的弗雷德·格兰特(后来自己也成为了一名将军),他跟随父亲尤利西斯与叛军作战。在视觉层面上,考虑图1和图2中的棱柱状小人。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Regimental Bands in the Civil War
Marching Brass Bands were new to the musical scene at the time of the Civil War and they performed in ways that seem odd and out of tune with our times. Brass bands of that era were part of the great shift from a "prismatic" to an "urban/ industrial" society. A prismatic society is analogous to an actual prism. Just as a prism is rotated slightly and a new color appears, so, too, in a prismatic society, the behavior of individuals can shift and change without regard to the situation at stake or the expectation of others. It is a world of interactional surprises. People living in such a culture are simply not subject to the role segmentation that makes life bearable in modern complex bureaucratized society. All of this means that prismatic people enjoy a wide range of options in what roles they can play and how they can play them. It is this feature of the prismatic circumstances of the Civil War era that is reflected in the culture and behavior of Bands and musicians during that time, and wherein culture is a kaleidoscope that can suddenly take a different shape and content. The South was still rooted in this "prismatic" stage (Rip-2s). The North was farther along the road to modernity, though it too retained much of the prismatic ethos. In a prismatic society social institutions overlap: family norms mix with political usages, economic with religious, and so forth. In them individual behavior is volatile and unstable-shifting quickly from one institutional expression to others. During these fleeting years of transition, persons were free of the stifling conformity demanded in a "folk" society, but not yet subject to the constraints to emerge in modern organizational society. The impact of a prismatic environment can be reflected in all aspects of culture, including bands and music. This is so because all role performances are less scripted than in the urban/organized world, and there is greater latitude for self-expression. Moreover, in the prismatic world appearances are poor guidelines to behavior. In short, things may seldom be what they seem in a prismatic society. Thus, when Robert E. Lee referred to his Union foes as "Those people" rather than as "the enemy" it was more than just a Southern gentleman speaking, and his remark did not mean he was inclined to kill fewer Yankees. Lee was merely speaking prismatically. On the other hand, when Sherman said, "I will make Georgia howl," he meant precisely that. Similarly, when a thirteen year old bugle boy, who had been shot in the head with an arrow, shot the Indian who put it there and took his scalp, it was more than a kid playing cowboy and Indian. Likewise, when a Confederate Band marched onto the battlefield at Gettysburg and entertained friend and foe with waltzes, polkas and two-- steps, it was not a crazy impulse, it was prismatic behavior (Leinbach). During pauses in battles, Yankee and Rebel Bands would gather on opposite sides of a river and engage in "battles of the Bands" after which they swapped coffee, sugar, tobacco, etc. moving the goodies back and forth on little sail boats made for the occasion (Furgurson). In the prismatic world, any situation can be easily and quickly redefined as something quite different from what it started out to be. Thus, enemies can suddenly become friends, lines of advancing and defending troops can become an audience, a child can become a ruthless killer, all set to the music of a Regimental Band. In prismatic communities, the main differentiations are between the very young and very old, and between males and females. Children are but miniaturized versions of larger people and act as if they were grown-ups, just as in the cases of the thirteen year old scalper; or the little girls who helped their mother, Rose Greenhow, in the business of espionage; or twelve year old Fred Grant (later a General himself), who tagged along with his Dad, Ulysses, as he battled Rebel armies. At the visual level, consider the prismatic little people in Images 1 and 2. …
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