Teaching Stravinsky: Nadia Boulanger and the Consecration of a Modernist Icon
Teaching Stravinsky: Nadia Boulanger and the Consecration of a Modernist Icon
this facilitated her own influential conversations with the composer about his works while also drawing her into close contact with his family. Through the theoretical lens of Bourdieu, and drawing upon over one thousand pages of letters and scores, many published here for the first time, Francis
examines the extent to which Boulanger played a foundational role in defining, defending, and ultimately consecrating Stravinsky's canonical identity. She considers how the quotidian events in the lives of these two icons of modernism informed both their art and their professional decisions, and
convincingly argues for a reevaluation of the influence of women on cultural production during the twentieth century. At once a story of one woman's vibrant friendship with an iconic modernist composer, and a case study in how gendered polemics informed professional negotiations of the artistic-political fields of the twentieth-century, Teaching Stravinsky sheds new light not only on how Boulanger taught
Stravinsky, but also how, in doing so, she managed to influence the course of modernism itself.
Author: Kimberly A. Francis
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 08/03/2015
Pages: 296
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.15lbs
Size: 9.30h x 6.10w x 1.10d
ISBN: 9780199373697
Review Citation(s):
Choice 07/01/2016
About the Author
Kimberly A. Francis is Associate Professor of Music at the University of Guelph, Canada, where she specializes in music of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries and feminist musicology. She serves as Editor-in-Chief for the University of Guelph's award-winning journal Critical Voices: The
University of Guelph Book Review Project and served as co-supervisor for the digitization of the Don Campbell Papers at the American Music Research Centre. Dr. Francis has been the recipient of a number of grants, including those from the American Musicological Society and the Social Sciences and
Humanities Research Council of Canada. Her numerous articles have appeared in everything from The Musical Quarterly to the Journal of the Society for American Music.
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