
Cultural Considerations
Focusing on aspects of American literary and musical culture in the decades after World War II, Rubin examines the contests between critics and their readers over the authority to make aesthetic judgments; the effort of academics to extend the university outward by bringing the humanities to a wide public; the politics of setting poetic texts to music; the role of ideology in the practice of commissioning and performing choral works; and the uses of reading in the service of both individualism and community. Specific topics include the 1957 attack by the critic John Ciardi on the poetry of Anne Morrow Lindbergh in the Saturday Review; the radio broadcasts of the classicist Gilbert Highet; Dwight Macdonald's vitriolic depiction of the novelist James Gould Cozzens as a pernicious middlebrow; the composition and reception of Howard Hanson's ""Song of Democracy""; the varied career of musician Gunther Schuller; the liberal humanism of America's foremost twentieth-century choral conductor, Robert Shaw; and the place of books in the student and women's movements of the 1960s.
What unites these essays is the author's ongoing concern with cultural boundaries, mediation, and ideology - and the contradictions they frequently entail.
- Undertitel
- Essays on Readers, Writers, and Musicians in Postwar America
- Författare
- Joan Shelley Rubin
- ISBN
- 9781625340139
- Språk
- Engelska
- Vikt
- 333 gram
- Utgivningsdatum
- 30.6.2013
- Sidor
- 208