Image for Music, culture and social reform in the age of Wagner

Music, culture and social reform in the age of Wagner

See all formats and editions

Challenging received views of music in nineteenth-century German thought, culture and society, this 2010 book provides a radical reappraisal of its socio-political meanings and functions.

Garratt argues that far from governing the nineteenth-century musical discourse and practice, the concept of artistic autonomy and the aesthetic categories bequeathed by Weimar classicism were persistently challenged by alternative models of music's social role.

The book investigates these competing models and the social projects that gave rise to them.

It interrogates nineteenth-century musical discourse, discussing a wide range of manifestos championing musical democratization or seeking to make music an engine for the transformation of society.

In addition, it explores institutions and movements that attempted to realize these goals, and compositions - by Mendelssohn, Lortzing and Liszt as well as Wagner - in which the relation between aesthetic and social claims is programmatic.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£110.00
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1107202590 / 9781107202597
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
21/01/2010
England
English
284 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%