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Japanese musical modanizumu: Interwar yogaku composers and modernism.
详细信息   
  • 作者:Etheridge ; Kathryn.
  • 学历:Ph.D.
  • 年:2014
  • 毕业院校:The Florida State University
  • Department:Music
  • ISBN:9781321214321
  • CBH:3637979
  • Country:USA
  • 语种:English
  • FileSize:7912286
  • Pages:243
文摘
The primary focus of my project is on yougaku written by Japanese composers during the Japanese interwar era. I examine how several composers saw themselves and their music in relation to the broader context of Japanese modernism by examining their music,writings,and biographies. The music of these composers encompasses a variety of styles and mediums; it also reflects a hybridity that incorporated local traditions,so that the result was not mere imitation but hybrid creations that captured each individual composers responses to specific conditions of his or her time and place. By bringing music to the forefront,I contribute to interdisciplinary discourse on Japanese modernism,a topic that has received increased attention over the past twenty-five years. I also address a lacuna in Japanese modernist studies: yougaku has received startlingly little attention in English-language scholarship on Japanese modernism. This lacuna is even more glaring because many scholars have discussed the influence that Japanese art and music have had upon Western modernism,but they have not considered the reciprocity of this process. While music reflects many of the same modernist values as other Japanese contemporary arts,it also presents differences that complicate current views of Japanese modernism. Many interwar Japanese groups and individuals claimed analogous Western movements as their major influences; as a result,it has been tempting to view Japanese creations as "Japanese versions" of these Western movements. However,the artists within these movements desired to change fundamentally the direction of their nations creative activities,not in a Western direction but in a new Japanese one. The first two chapters of the dissertation provide broad historical and cultural context for my case studies of interwar composers. The Introduction considers multiple conceptions of "modernism" through close examination of key sources relating to interwar music and modernist aesthetics in various contexts. As this chapter demonstrates,interwar Japanese yougaku has not received the same attention as the literary and visual arts have in regards to Japanese modernism,especially in English language sources. Chapter Two reviews the history of Japan between 1868 and the late 1930s as it relates to music. Each of my three case studies Chapters Three,Four,and Five) focuses on one composer whose aesthetic stance and/or practical application of modernist thought reflected broader trends of the interwar era. Yamada Kousaku 1886-1965) served as an unofficial arts and music ambassador; he also represents an early generation of graduates from the Tokyo Music School and the shared practices of those graduates studying abroad in Germany. Unlike Yamada,Sugahara Meirou 1897-1988) was largely self-taught,and he did not travel to Europe until after the end of World War II. He championed modern French music,and his own works exhibit a Japanese neoclassical style. As a female composer,Yoshida Takako 1910-56) offers a completely different perspective on interwar yougaku. Through her roles a progressive composer and as a social activist,Yoshida emulated the Japanese "Modern Girl," an archetype closely associated with Japanese interwar modernism.

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