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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Donna A. BuchananPublisher: The University of Chicago Press Imprint: University of Chicago Press Dimensions: Width: 1.60cm , Height: 0.40cm , Length: 2.40cm Weight: 0.851kg ISBN: 9780226078267ISBN 10: 0226078264 Pages: 496 Publication Date: 01 November 2005 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviews[Buchanan] amply contextualizes and chronicles the rise and--if not complete demise, then at least rapid decline--of Bulgaria's professional folk song and dance ensembles. . . . Through her musicological and ethnological anlyses of the individuals and groups who literally and visibly 'played out' the sociopolitical changes of their times . . . Buchanan effectively argues against the marginalization of music as aesthetic frill of little relevance by demonstrating its centrality, potential and actual, to social and political life. --Karen A. Peters The World of Music The book offers a fascinating, comprehensive, and informed account of music and nation buildong in the context of the intense sociopolitical changes that took place in Bulgaria. . . . [Buchanan's] gifts as a brilliant storyteller bring another attractive quality that makes Performing Democracy a welcomed, challenging title in the world of contemporary ethnographic and anthropological scholarship. --Claire Levy Ethnomusicology The product of fifteen years of research and writing, this book documents in impressive detail how the seismic twentieth-century shifts from tsarist monarchy to Soviet-style totalitarian state and then parliamentary democracy were negotiated, imagined, and enacted by professional musicians. Carole Pegg, Slavic Review--Carole Pegg Slavic Review The power of the book comes primarily from Buchanan's ability to address the historical question of post-socialist transition by weaving together rich ethnographic fieldnotes and knowledgeable ethnomusicological, discursive, and historiographical analyses. . . . Although this expansive book is first and foremost an ethnomusicological investigation, its value exceeds narrow disciplinary boundaries. For the particular needs of folklorists . . . Performing Democracy contributes a highly important approach. --Eran Livni Journal of Folklore Research The title of this excellent book is more than a play on words. Buchanan demonstrates how the professionalization of folk music by the socialist state for nationalist purposes actually validated notions of western modernity, making the democratic transition more attractive and placing professional musicians at an important political location. These observations help clarify the rather complex and paradoxical political situation in postsocialist Bulgaria. Anyone who doubts the political power of music--or culture more broadly--should read this book. --Gerald Creed, Hunter College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York -- (07/26/2005) The fall of the Berlin Wall launched a series of cataclysmic changes throughout Eastern Europe that have profoundly affected the region's musical life. Performing Democracy situates itself on the cusp of those changes. Focusing on Bulgaria, it details both government-sponsored music-making during the final years of the socialist period, and an array of musical activities that developed during the period of transition to capitalism and democracy. Based on intensive fieldwork carried out over a period of several years, it is the most significant study to chronicle musical developments during this important period of Eastern European history. --Jane C. Sugarman, State University of New York at Stony Brook -- (05/17/2005) The title of this excellent book is more than a play on words. Buchanan demonstrates how the professionalization of folk music by the socialist state for nationalist purposes actually validated notions of western modernity, making the democratic transition more attractive and placing professional musicians at an important political location. These observations help clarifythe rather complex and paradoxical political situation in postsocialist Bulgaria. Anyone who doubts the political power of music--or culture more broadly--should read this book. --;br> --Gerald Creed Gerald Creed (07/26/2005) The fall of the Berlin Wall launched a series of cataclysmic changes throughout Eastern Europe that have profoundly affected the region's musical life. Performing Democracy situates itself on the cusp of those changes. Focusing on Bulgaria, it details both government-sponsored music-making during the final years of the socialist period, and an array of musical activities that developed during the period of transition to capitalism and democracy. Based on intensive fieldwork carried out over a period of several years, it is the most significant study to chronicle musical developments during this important period of Eastern European history. --Jane C. Sugarman, State University of New York at Stony Brook -- Jane C. Sugarman Jane C. Sugarman (05/17/2005) The product of fifteen years of research and writing, this book documents in impressive detail how the seismic twentieth-century shifts from tsarist monarchy to Soviet-style totalitarian state and then parliamentary democracy were negotiated, imagined, and enacted by professional musicians. Carole Pegg, Slavic Review --Carole Pegg Slavic Review The title of this excellent book is more than a play on words.Buchanan demonstrates how the professionalization of folk music by the socialist state for nationalist purposes actually validated notions of western modernity, making the democratic transition more attractive and placing professional musicians at an important political location.These observations help clarifythe rather complex and paradoxical political situation in postsocialist Bulgaria.Anyone who doubts the political power of music or culture more broadly should read this book. --;br>--Gerald Creed Gerald Creed (07/26/2005) Author InformationDonna A. Buchanan is associate professor of music and director of the Russian, East European, and Eurasian Center at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |