Preface
I. The Political Sphere
1. "Robert Schumann and the Culture of German Nationhood,"
Celia Applegate
2. "Organizing German Musical Life at Mid-Century: Brendel,
Schumann and the Leipzig
Tonkünstlerversammlungen/Tonkünstlerverein,"
James Deaville
3. "The Cry of the Schuhu: Dissonant History in a Late Schumann
Song,"
Susan Youens
4. "Segregating Sound: Robert Schumann in the Third Reich,"
Lily E. Hirsch
II. Popular Influences
5. "At the Interstice between 'Popular' and 'Classical': Schumann's
Poems of
Queen Mary Stuart and European Sentimentality at Mid-Century,"
Jon Finson
6. "Who was Mignon, what was she? Popular Catholicism, Fairytale
Archetype,
and Puer Senex in the Reception of Schumann's Requiem für
Mignon,"
Roe-Min Kok
7. "Entzückt: Schumann, Raphael, Faust,"
Nicholas Marston
8. "Schumann and Agencies of Improvisation,"
Dana Gooley
9. "Schumann's Melodramatic Afterlife,"
Ivan Raykoff
III. Analytical Approaches
10. "Meter and Expression in Robert Schumann's Op. 90,"
Harald Krebs
11. "Hypermetric Dissonance in the Later Works of Robert
Schumann,"
William Benjamin
12. "Associative Harmony, Tonal Pairing, and Middleground Structure
in Schumann's Sonata Expositions: The Role of the Mediant in the
First Movements of the Piano Quintet, Piano Quartet, and 'Rhenish'
Symphony,"
Peter Smith
13. "Schumann and the style hongrois,"
Julie Hedges Brown
14. "Intermediate States of Key in Schumann,"
David Kopp
IV. 20th-Century Reception
15. "Choreographing Schumann,"
Wayne Heisler
16. "The Fictional Lives of the Schumanns,"
David Ferris
17. "Deserted Chambers of the Mind (Schumann Memories),"
Laura Tunbridge
18. "Late Styles,"
Scott Burnham
Roe-Min Kok is Assistant Professor of Music at McGill University.
She is co-editor of Musical Childhoods and the Cultures of Youth
(2006).
Laura Tunbridge is Senior Lecturer in Music Analysis and Critical
Theory at the University of Manchester. Her publications include
Schumann's Late Style (2007) and The Song Cycle (forthcoming).
"This volume does indeed manage to offer some significant
'rethinking' on Schumann, and even highlights more areas that could
be researched by scholars to come...The only disappointment in such
a collections of essays is when they finish." --Nineteenth-Century
Music Review
"This splendid and inviting collection of essays by a stellar group
of authors offers fresh insights into Schumann's later works and
their reception. Its methodological diversity and thematic breadth
represent the cutting edge of musical scholarship today."--Annegret
Fauser, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
"A rewarding and readable collection of new Schumann scholarship
that showcases current disciplinary perspectives. Historians,
analysts, and cultural critics probe Schumann's music and his
wide-ranging influence, paying special attention to lesser known
dimensions of the composer's work. Included are eye-opening,
exhilarating essays that we will turn to again and again."
--Kristina Muxfeldt, Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University
"Contributors and editors alike have evidently strived to make this
extraordinary, revelatory collection prima facie accessible."
--Notes
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