
Composing the Party Line
Based on a deep analysis of the archival and contemporary published sources on state, party, and professional organisations concerned with musical life, Tompkins argues that music, as a significant part of cultural production in these countries, played a key role in instituting and maintaining the regimes of East Central Europe. As part of the Stalinist project to create and control a new socialist identity at the personal as well as collective level, the ruling parties in East Germany and Poland sought to saturate public space through the production of music. Politically effective ideas and symbols were introduced that furthered their attempts to, in the parlance of the day, “engineer the human soul.”
Music also helped the Communist parties establish legitimacy. Extensive state support for musical life encouraged musical elites and audiences to accept the dominant position and political missions of these regimes. Party leaders invested considerable resources in the attempt to create an authorised musical language that would secure and maintain hegemony over the cultural and wider social worlds. The responses of composers and audiences ran the gamut from enthusiasm to suspicion, but indifference was not an option.
- Alaotsikko
- Music and Politics in Early Cold War Poland and East Germany
- Kirjailija
- David G. Tompkins
- ISBN
- 9781557536471
- Kieli
- englanti
- Paino
- 481 grammaa
- Julkaisupäivä
- 15.9.2013
- Kustantaja
- Purdue University Press
- Sivumäärä
- 300