Loading…

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...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Slobin, Mark (Editor)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:Inglés
Published: Durham : Duke University Press, 1996.
Series:Book collections on Project MUSE.
Subjects:
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.