Britten's Unquiet Pasts: Sound and Memory in Postwar Reconstruction

Britten's Unquiet Pasts: Sound and Memory in Postwar Reconstruction book cover

Britten's Unquiet Pasts: Sound and Memory in Postwar Reconstruction

Author(s): Heather Wiebe (Author)

  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press
  • Publication Date: November 19, 2012
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 250 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0521194679
  • ISBN-13: 9780521194679

Book Description

Examining the intersections between musical culture and a British project of reconstruction from the 1940s to the early 1960s, this study asks how gestures toward the past negotiated issues of recovery and renewal. In the wake of the Second World War, music became a privileged site for re-enchanting notions of history and community, but musical recourse to the past also raised issues of mourning and loss. How was sound figured as a historical object and as a locus of memory and magic? Wiebe addresses this question using a wide range of sources, from planning documents to journalism, public ceremonial and literature. Its central focus, however, is a set of works by Benjamin Britten that engaged both with the distant musical past and with key episodes of postwar reconstruction, including the Festival of Britain, the Coronation of Elizabeth II and the rebuilding of Coventry Cathedral.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Highly recommended.”
–Choice

“Heather Wiebe’s astute new monograph Britten’s Unquiet Pasts shows how Britten’s patriotic project dovetailed both with a nostalgic turn in postwar English tastes and with the nation’s more forward-looking cultural enterprises…”
-New York Review of Books

Book Description

Heather Wiebe’s book looks to the music of Benjamin Britten to elucidate a British postwar vision of cultural renewal.

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