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Abstract
The sounds of music and the German language have played a significant role in the developing symbolism of the German nation. In light of the historical division of Germany into many disparate political entities and regional groups, German artists and intellectuals of the 19th and early 20th centuries conceived of musical and linguistic dispositions as the nation's most palpable common ground. According to this view, the peculiar sounds of German music and of the German language provided a direct conduit to national identity, to the deepest recesses of the German soul. So strong is this legacy of sound is still prevalent in modern German culture that philosopher Peter Sloterdijk, in a recent essay, did not even hesitate to describe post-wall Germany as an "acoustical body."
This volume gathers the work of scholars from the US, Germany, and the United Kingdom to explore the role of sound in modern and postmodern German cultural production. Working across established disciplines and methodological divides, the essays of Sound Matters investigate the ways in which texts, artists, and performers in all kinds of media have utilized sonic materials in order to enforce or complicate dominant notions of German cultural and national identity.
Lutz Koepnick is Associate Professor of German, Film and Media Studies at Washington University in St. Louis. He is the author of Walter Benjamin and the Aesthetics of Power (The University of Nebraska Press, 1999), for which he received the MLA's Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione Prize for Studies in Germanic Languages and Literatures in 2000; and of Nothungs Modernität: Wagners Ring und die Poesie der Politik im neunzehnten Jahrhundert (Munich: Wilhelm Fink Verlag, 1994). His next book, The Dark Mirror: German Cinema Between Hitler and Hollywood, will be published this fall by the University of California Press. He is currently working on a project, "Framing Attention: Windows on Modern German Culture."
“This volume is a most welcome contribution to an area of inquiry the editors concede as been slow to flourish in German Cultures Studies…the polished and thought-provoking essays in this anthology will lead readers to begin hearing things differently in their own research and teaching.” · German Studies Review
Nora M. Alter is Professor of German, Film and Media Studies at the University of Florida. She is author of Vietnam Protest Theatre: The Television War on Stage (Indiana UP, 1996) and Projecting History: German Non-Fiction Film 1967-2000, (University of Michigan Press, 2002). She has published articles in New German Critique, The Germanic Review, Cultural Critique, Studies in Twentieth Century Literature, and contributed essays to Beyond 1989, Imperialism and Theatre and Triangulated Visions. She is currently working on a project on the "The Essay Film."
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Title Page | iii | ||
Copyright Page | iv | ||
Contents | v | ||
Acknowledgments | vii | ||
Introduction | 1 | ||
Part I. Sound Nation? | 31 | ||
Chapter 1. Hegemony Through Harmony | 33 | ||
Chapter 2. Mahler contra Wagner | 49 | ||
Chapter 3. Conducting Music, Conducting War | 65 | ||
Part II. Dissonant Visions | 77 | ||
Chapter 4. The Politics and Sounds of Everyday Life in Kuhle Wampe | 79 | ||
Chapter 5. Sound Money | 91 | ||
Chapter 6. The Castrato's Voices | 104 | ||
Part III. Sounds of Silence | 115 | ||
Chapter 7. Benjamin's Silence | 117 | ||
Chapter 8. Deafening Sound and Troubling Silence in Volker Schlondorff's Die Blechtrommel | 130 | ||
Chapter 9. Silence is Golden? | 142 | ||
Part IV. Translating Sound | 153 | ||
Chapter 10. Broadcasting Wagner | 155 | ||
Chapter 11. Sounds Familiar? | 171 | ||
Chapter 12. Roll Over Beethoven! Chuck Berry! Mick Jagger! | 183 | ||
Chapter 13. The Music That Lola Ran To | 197 | ||
Part V. Memory, Music, and the Postmodern | 215 | ||
Chapter 14. \"Heiner Muller Vertonen | 217 | ||
Chapter 15. The Technological Subject | 228 | ||
Contributors | 242 | ||
Index | 245 |