Introduction [Stephen Meyer and Kirsten Yri]
Section 1: Romanticizing the Medieval: The Longing for the Middle
Ages in the Nineteenth Century
1. Medievalisms in Early Nineteenth-Century German Thought [Laura
K. T. Stokes]
2. From Knight Errant to Family Man: Romantic Medievalism and
Domesticity in Brahms's 15 Romanzen aus L. Tieck's Schöne Magelone,
op. 33 (1865, 1869) [Marie Sumner Lott]
3. Liszt's Medievalist Modernism [Balázs Mikusi]
4. Soldiers and Censors: Verdi's Medieval Imagination [Liana
Püschel]
5. The Distant Past as Mirror and Metaphor:ÂPortraying Medievalism
in Historical French Grand Operas [Diana Hallman]
6. Medievalism and Regionalist Identity in Lalo's Le Roi d'Ys
[Elinor Olin]
7. Romantic Medievalist Nationalism in Schumann's genoveva, Then
and Now [Michael S. Richardson]
8. The Middle Ages in Richard Wagner's Music Dramas [Barbara
Eichner]
Section 2: Performing the Middle Ages
9. Medievalism at the University: Collegia and Choral Societies
[Jacob Sagrans]
10. Medieval Folk in the Revivals of David Munrow [Edward
Breen]
11. Re-sounding Carl Dreyer's La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc [Donald
Greig]
Section 3: Medievalism and Compositional Practice in the Twentieth
Century
12. Medievalism and Anti-Romanticism in Carl Orff's Carmina Burana
[Kirsten Yri]
13. Past Tense: Creative Medievalism in the Music of Margaret Lucy
Wilkins [Lisa Colton]
14. Hucbald's Fifths and Vaughan Williams's Mass: The New Medieval
in Britain Between the Wars [Deborah Heckert]
15. Complexity and Appeal of Codex Chantilly Six Hundred Years
Hence [Aleksandra Vojcic]
16. Linear Practices in the Music of Arvo Pärt [Laura Dolp]
17. The Postmodern Troubadour [Anne Stone]
Section 4: Reimagining the Medieval Woman
18. Tolling Bells and Otherworldly Voices: Joan of Arc's Sonic
World in the Early Twentieth Century [Elizabeth Dister]
19. Medievalism and Rued Langgaard's Romantic Image of Queen Dagmar
[Nils Holger-Petersen]
20. Nature as Enlightenment in Vision-Aus dem Leben der Hildegard
von Bingen [Jennifer Bain]
21. Disciplining Guinevere: Courtly Love and the Arthurian
Tradition from Henry Purcell to Donovan Leitch [Gillian L.
Gower]
Section 5: Echoes of the Middle Ages in Folk, Rock, and Metal
22. Early Music and Popular Music: Medievalism, Nostalgia, and the
Beatles [Elizabeth Upton]
23. "Ramble On": Medievalism as Nostalgic Practice in Led
Zeppelin's use of J. R. R. Tolkien [Caitlin Carlos]
24. A Gothic Romance: Neomedieval Echoes of Fin'amor in Gothic and
Doom Metal [Ross Hagen]
25. Viking Metal [Simon Trafford]
26. Medievalism and Identity Construction in Pagan Folk Music
[Scott R. Troyer]
Section 6: Medievalism of the Screen
27. From the Music of the Ainur to the Music of the Voiceover:
Sounding Medievalism in The Lord of the Rings [Stephen C.
Meyer]
28. Faith, Fear, Silence and Music in Ingmar Bergman's Medieval
Vision of The Virgin Spring and The Seventh Seal [Alexis Luko]
29. Hope Against Fate or Fata Morgana? Music and Mythopoiesis in
Boorman's excalibur [David Clem]
30. The Many Musical Medievalisms of Disney [John Haines]
31. Evil Medieval: Chant and the New Dark Spirituality of
Vietnam-Era Film in America [James Deaville]
32. Fantasy Medievalism and Screen Media (Game of Thrones) [James
Cook]
33. Gaming the Medievalist World in Harry Potter [Karen M. Cook]
Stephen C. Meyer is Professor of Musicology at the University of
Cincinnati's College-Conservatory of Music. He is the author of
Carl Maria von Weber and the Search for a German Opera (2003) and
Epic Sound: Music in Postwar Hollywood Biblical Films (2015) as
well as numerous articles on topics ranging from nineteenth-century
German opera to film music to the history of recorded sound. He is
editor of Music in Epic Film:
Listening to Spectacle (2016), and from 2014 to 2018 he served as
the Editor-in-Chief for the Journal of Music History Pedagogy.
Kirsten Yri is Associate Professor of Musicology at the Faculty of
Music at Wilfrid Laurier University in Canada. She has published
widely on the role of the early music revival and the intersections
between music and medievalism in American Music, Intersections,
Early Music, and Women and Music. Her work on medievalism and rock
music (Dead Can Dance, Black Sabbath, and Corvus Corax) has been
published in Current Musicology,
Popular Music, and Postmedieval. Her recent research examines
parody, gender, and social programs in Carl Orff's Trionfi against
a context of German contemporary literary and philosophical
debates.
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