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E-raamat: Musical Identities and European Perspective: An Interdisciplinary Approach

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This book focuses on the relationship between identity and music in Europe from different angles. It takes two basic categories into account: identities in music and music in identities. The authors provide studies on identity construction in different historical and geographical contexts.



This book focuses on the relationship between identity and music in Europe from different angles. It takes two basic categories into account: identities in music and music in identities. The authors provide studies on identity construction in different historical and geographical contexts. They also evaluate the discourse of popular music in Europe and analyze various topics related to complex and changing concepts of identity, whether it is about an individual composer, issues of style or musical work itself.

Introduction 7(6)
Music and Identity: Defining `Self' and `Other'
The Velvet Curtain. European Identities and Lithuanian Musical Imagination in the Post-Communist Era
13(26)
Ruta Staneviciute
Karol Szymanowski and His Concept of Modern Music Culture
39(16)
Malgorzata Janicka-Slysz
From `Good Other' to `Ideal Self': Images of Russian Otherness in France and the Iberian Peninsula at the Turn of the 20th Century
55(18)
Paulo F. de Castro
Ambiguity, Mimicry and War: Alla Turca in Contredanse K 535 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
73(18)
Ivana Perkovic
Defining Identity: In Quest of `Lithuanianness' in Piano Performance Art
91(24)
Lina Navickaite-Martinelli
Unity in Diversity
Influence, imitation, and the reshaping of identities in European popular music
115(12)
Franco Fabbri
Rock me Lane moje -- European Identifications of Transitory Yugoslav/West Balkans' Identities at the Eurovision Song Contest
127(18)
Vesna Mikic
Memory, Spectacle, and the Image of Songs
145(16)
Saskia Jaszoltowski
The Estonian Singing Revolution: Musematic Insights
161(26)
Kaire Maimets
(Re)Conceptualizing Approaches to Music and `Europness'
Short Correspondence between Edgard Varese and John Cage: Around, about and above `organized sound'
187(16)
Dragana Stojanovic-Novicic
The Facets of the Decline of Avant-Garde Exclusivity as the Cause of Specific Stylistic Connotations of the Musical Avant-Garde Today
203(18)
Mirjana Veselinovic-Hofman
Types of Transtextuality in Selected Works of Serbian Musical Postmodernism
221(22)
Marija Masnikosa
The Musical Text and the Ontology of the Musical Work
243(54)
Tijana Popovic Mladjenovic
List of Contributors 297
Ivana Perkovi is a musicologist and Professor at the Department of Musicology, Faculty of Music, University of Arts, Belgrade. She is member of the International Musicological Society, Serbian Musicological Society and the International Society for Orthodox Church Music. She is vice dean for research and international cooperation at the Faculty of Music.









Franco Fabbri teaches popular music history, analysis and economy at the Conservatory of Parma and the University of Milan. His main interests are genre theories and music typologies, the impact of media and technology across genres and musical cultures, and the history of popular music. He has served twice as chairman of the International Association for the Study of Popular Music (IASPM).