Music and Mirrored Hybridities

Cultural Communities Converging in French, German, and Turkish Stage Productions (17th-20th Century), Istanbuler Texte und Studien (ITS) 49

Judith I Haug/Hanna Walsdorf

242 Seiten

59,00 €
Inkl. 7% Steuern

Lieferzeit: 5 Werktage(inkl . Versand)

In early modern Europe, music-theatrical patterns of representing the foreign Other helped shape relations with the Ottoman Empire. Accordingly, hybridity must be understood as a dynamic practice playing with cultural blends and borrowings, albeit possibly (re-)producing inequalities, ambiguities, and clichés. Representations of Ottomans/Turks appear as musical features emerging out of vague inspirations derived from Ottoman/Turkish music, creating a particular sound that could be decoded as Ottoman or Turkish by contemporary listeners. This volume addresses the convergence of cultural communities on stage from early modern France to present-day Turkey, starting from the iconic Turkish scene from Le Bourgeois gentilhomme (1670). With contributions by Özlem Berk Albachten - Thomas Betzwieser - Aysenaz Cengiz - Marie Demeilliez - Irène Feste - Judith I. Haug - Hubert Hazebroucq - Gerrit Berenike Heiter - Evren Kutlay - Martin Laiblin - Hanna Walsdorf

Mehr Informationen
Autor Judith I Haug/Hanna Walsdorf
Verlag Ergon Verlag
ISBN 9783987400445
ISBN/EAN 9783987400445
Lieferzeit 5 Werktage(inkl . Versand)
Erscheinungsdatum 27.07.2023
Lieferbarkeitsdatum 14.10.2023
Einband Gebunden
Format 1.9 x 24.5 x 17.8
Seitenzahl 242 S.
Gewicht 645

Weitere Informationen

Mehr Informationen
Verlag Ergon Verlag
ISBN 9783987400445
Erscheinungsdatum 27.07.2023
Einband Gebunden
Format 1.9 x 24.5 x 17.8
Gewicht 645

In early modern Europe, music-theatrical patterns of representing the foreign Other helped shape relations with the Ottoman Empire. Accordingly, hybridity must be understood as a dynamic practice playing with cultural blends and borrowings, albeit possibly (re-)producing inequalities, ambiguities, and clichés. Representations of Ottomans/Turks appear as musical features emerging out of vague inspirations derived from Ottoman/Turkish music, creating a particular sound that could be decoded as Ottoman or Turkish by contemporary listeners. This volume addresses the convergence of cultural communities on stage from early modern France to present-day Turkey, starting from the iconic Turkish scene from Le Bourgeois gentilhomme (1670). With contributions by Özlem Berk Albachten - Thomas Betzwieser - Aysenaz Cengiz - Marie Demeilliez - Irène Feste - Judith I. Haug - Hubert Hazebroucq - Gerrit Berenike Heiter - Evren Kutlay - Martin Laiblin - Hanna Walsdorf

 

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