Retuning Culture : Musical Changes in Central and Eastern Europe /
As a measure of individual and collective identity, music offers both striking metaphors and tangible data for understanding societies in transition--and nowhere is this clearer than in the recent case of the Eastern Bloc. Retuning Culture presents an extraordinary picture of this phenomenon. This p...
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Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | Inglés |
Published: |
Durham :
Duke University Press,
1996.
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Series: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Online Access: | Texto completo |
Table of Contents:
- Dmitri Pokrovsky and the Russian folk music revival movement / Theodore Levin
- Kundera's musical Joke and "folk" music in Czechoslovakia, 1948-? / Michael Beckerman
- Aesthetic of the Hungarian revival movement / Judit Frigyesi
- Lakodalmas rock and the rejection of popular culture in post-socialist Hungary / Barbara Rose Lange
- Continuity and change in eastern and central European traditional music / Anna Czekanowska
- Southern wind of change : style and the politics of identity in prewar Yugoslavia / Ljerka Vidíc Rasmussen
- Ilahiya as a symbol of Bosnian Muslim national identity / Mirjana Lauševíc
- Nationalism on stage : music and change in Soviet Ukraine / Catherine Wanner
- Romanian revolution of December 1989 and its reflection in musical folklore / Steluţa Popa
- Dialectic of economics and aesthetics in Bulgarian music / Timothy Rice
- Wedding musicians, political transition, and national consciousness in Bulgaria / Donna A. Buchanan
- Music and marginality : Roma (Gypsies) of Bulgaria and Macedonia / Carol Silverman
- Change as confirmation of continuity as experienced by Russian Molokans / Margarita Mazo.