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Index
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Introduction
Preface
Chapter 1 Real Worlds, and Better Ones
Deeds of music
The dialectical antithesis
The Code Rossini
Imbroglio
Heart Throbs
“Realism”
Bel canto
Utopia
Chapter 2 The Music Trance
The I and the we
Private music
Altered consciousness
Salon culture
Schubert: A life in art
Privatizing the public sphere
Crossing the edge
Only connect
New cycles
B-minor moods
Constructions of identity
Chapter 3 Volkstümlichkeit
The lied is born
The discovery of the folk
Kultur
Lyrics and narratives
The lied grows up: Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven
Schubert and romantic irony
Representations of consciousness
Romantic nationalism
The liturgy of nationhood
The oratorio reborn
Mendelssohn and civic nationalism
Nationalism takes a turn
Epilogue: Two prodigies
Chapter 4 Nations, States, and Peoples
I. PEASANTS (GERMANY)
Mr. Natural
Der Freischütz
II. HISTORY (FRANCE)
Opera and revolution
Bourgeois kings
Grandest of the grand
Vagaries of reception
III. PEASANTS AND HISTORY (RUSSIA)
A newcomer to the tradition
Chapter 5 Virtuosos
Stimulus
Response
The concerto transformed
A divided culture
Chapter 6 Critics
The public sphere
What is a philistine?
Literary music
How music poses
Anxiety and recoil
Instrumental drama
The limits of music
Varieties of representation
Discriminating romanticisms
Chapter 7 Self and Other
Genius and stranger
National or universal?
Or exotic?
The pinnacle of salon music
The Chopinesque miniature
Nationalism as a medium
Harmonic dissolution
Playing “romantically”
The Chopinesque sublime
Sonata later on
Nationalism as a message
America joins in
Art and democracy
Stereotyping the other: “Orientalism”
Sexàla russe
The other in the self
Chapter 8 Midcentury
Historicism
The new German school
The symphony later on
But what does it really mean?
The new madrigalism
Art and truth
Art for art’s sake
Chapter 9 Slavs as Subjects and Citizens
Progressive vs. popular
The nationalist compact
Fluidity
Folk and nation
How the acorn took root
National becomes nationalist
The politics of interpretation
Chapter 10 Deeds of Music Made Visible (Class of 1813, I)
The problem
Art and revolution
The artwork of the future, modeled (as always) on the imagined past
From theory into practice: The Ring
Form and content
The texture of tenseless time
The sea of harmony
Desire and how to channel it
The ultimate experience
How far can you stretch a dominant?
When resolution comes. . .
The problem revisited
Chapter 11 Artist, Politician, Farmer (Class of 1813, II)
Spooked
The galley years
The popular style
Tragicomedy
Opera as modern drama
A job becomes a calling
Compression and expansion
Comedization
Chapter 12 Cutting Things Down to Size
Going too far
Art and autocracy
Stalemate and subversion
Crisis
Codes
Lyric drama
Satyr plays
Operetta and its discontents
Verismo
Truth or sadism?
Chapter 13 The Return of the Symphony
The dry decades
Museum culture
New paths
Three “Firsts”
Struggle (with whom?)
A choral (and a nationalistic) interlude
Inventing tradition
Victory through critique
Reconciliation and backlash
Brahminism
Developing variation
Chapter 14 The Symphony Goes (Inter)National
Germany recedes
Symphony as sacrament
A Bohemian prescription for America
An American response
War brings it to France
Symphonist as virtuoso
The epic style
Symphonies of Suffering
National Monuments
Notes
Art Credits
Further Reading
Index
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