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    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      January 2023
      January 2023
      ISBN:
      9781009172776
      9781009172783
      Dimensions:
      (244 x 170 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.67kg, 286 Pages
      Dimensions:
      Weight & Pages:
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  • Selected: Digital
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    Book description

    The symphony has long been entangled with ideas of self and value. Though standard historical accounts suggest that composers' interest in the symphony was almost extinguished in the early 1930s, this book makes plain the genre's continued cultural dominance, and argues that the symphony can illuminate issues around space/geography, race, and postcolonialism in Germany, France, Mexico, and the United States. Focusing on a number of symphonies composed or premiered in 1933, this book recreates some of the cultural and political landscapes of an uncertain historical moment-a year when Hitler took power in Germany, and the Great Depression reached its peak in the United States. Interwar Symphonies and the Imagination asks what North American and European symphonies from the early 1930s can tell us about how people imagined selfhood during a period of international insecurity and political upheaval, of expansionist and colonial fantasies, scientised racism, and emergent fascism.

    Reviews

    ‘… richly detailed, deeply informative, and finely written … a valuable addition to the literature both on the symphony as a genre and on twentieth-century music as a whole.’

    Matthew Mugmon Source: Notes: the Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association

    ‘[This] richly detailed, deeply informative, and finely written book [is] a valuable addition to the literature both on the symphony as a genre and on twentieth-century music as a whole.’

    Matthew Mugmon Source: Notes

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