|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewMost scholars since World War Two have assumed that composer Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy (1809-1847) maintained a strong attachment to Judaism throughout his lifetime. As these commentators have rightly noted, Mendelssohn was born Jewish and did not convert to Protestantism until age seven, his grandfather was the famous Jewish reformer and philosopher Moses Mendelssohn, and his music was banned by the Nazis, who clearly viewed him as a Jew.Such facts tell only part of the story, however. Through a mix of cultural analysis, biographical study, and a close examination of the libretto drafts of Mendelssohn's sacred works, The Price of Assimilation provides dramatic new answers to the so-called ""Mendelssohn Jewish question.""Sposato demonstrates how Mendelssohn's father, Abraham, worked to distance the family from its Jewish past, and how Mendelssohn's reputation as a composer of Christian sacred music was threatened by the reverence with which German Jews viewed his family name. In order to prove the sincerity of his Christian faith to both his father and his audiences, Mendelssohn aligned his early sacred works with a nineteenth-century anti-Semitic musical tradition, and did so more fervently than even his Christian collaborators required. With the death of Mendelssohn's father and the near simultaneous establishment of the composer's career in Leipzig in 1835, however, Mendelssohn's fear of his background began to dissipate, and he began to explore ways in which he could prove the sincerity of his faith without having to publicly disparage his Jewish heritage. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jeffrey SposatoPublisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.90cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.354kg ISBN: 9780195386899ISBN 10: 0195386892 Pages: 244 Publication Date: 18 December 2008 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of Contents"Introduction I: New Christians The Mendelssohns and the Synagogue Reinventing Mendelssohn Mendelssohn's Evolving Relationship with Judaism II: The St. Matthew Passion Revival Judicious Cuts The St. Matthew Passion Chorales and the Berlin Hymn Tradition The St. Matthew Passion and the Theology of Friedrich Schleiermacher Other Performances of the St. Matthew Passion III: Moses Christology, Anti-Semitism, and Moses Mendelssohn, Marx, and the Nineteenth-Century Anti-Semitic Tradition IV: Paulus A Textual History of Paulus Paulus and the Influences of Carl Loewe, Louis Spohr, and Abraham Mendelssohn Paulus and Philo-Heathenism The Evolution of the Anti-Semitic Image in Paulus Lessons from Paulus: A Reevaluation of Die erste Walpurgisnacht V: Elias A Textual History of Elias Christology in Elias The Jewish Image in Elias VI: Christus The Genesis of Christus The Jewish Image in Christus The Universality of ""Das Volk"" Conclusion: Matters of Perspective"Reviews"""A good part of the core of Sposato's work has become and will remain part of the conventional wisdom.""--Donald Mintz, Music and Letters ""A significant new book""--Pittsburgh Post Gazette ""Well researched and well written, this remarkable book revises, deepens, and, best of all, clarifies Mendelssohn's personal and professional responses to his position as a converted Jew in the first half of the 19th century...Sposato's careful study of Mendelssohn's biography, his manuscripts, and the historical period produces a fascinating new picture of the composer.... Essential.""--CHOICE ""Mendelssohn has always been something of an enigma. Was his motivation as a composer primarily Jewish or Christian? In this carefully reasoned re-examination of the documentary evidence, Jeffrey S. Sposato argues that the matter is much more complex than is usually presented. Paradoxically, Mendelssohn seems to have shared the common Anti-Semitic stance of Protestant Germany and only in later life moderated this position. This is an important--if somewhat disturbing--book that carefully distinguishes the various shades of gray that have been hitherto interpreted as either black or white, helping us to understand the cultural context of the man and his music, especially the larger choral works.""--Professor Robin A. Leaver, Westminster Choir College of Rider University and The Juilliard School ""In his book, Sposato presents an enigmatic and multifaced personality of Mendelsohn which does not fit conveniently in either extreme religious classification. Sposato offers a substantial argument that in a utilitarian way will hopefully open a dialogue of polemics in Mendelssohn interpretation.""--Choral Journal ""Jeffrey Sposato's stimulating study is a major contribution to the debate about Mendelssohn's relationship with his Jewish heritage, which for more than 150 years has been characterized by obfuscation and prejudice. Through a careful and scholarly examination of the evidence, including a ground-breaking investigation of the process by which Mendelssohn selected and revised his oratorio texts, Sposato challenges many images of the composer that were reflected by the distorting mirror of racial, political, and moral agendas.""--Clive Brown, Professor of Applied Musicology, University of Leeds ""A probing, impeccably researched investigation into Mendelssohn's sacred music and its subtext--the composer's mediation between his Judaic heritage and Protestant faith. Eloquently written and argued, The Price of Assimilation will encourage a fresh look at one of the most misunderstood, seminal figures of nineteenth-century music.""--R. Larry Todd, Professor of Music, Duke University ""A significant new book"" -- Pittsburgh Post Gazette ""Well researched and well written, this remarkable book revises, deepens, and, best of all, clarifies Mendelssohn's personal and professional responses to his position as a converted Jew in the first half of the 19th century...Sposato's careful study of Mendelssohn's biography, his manuscripts, and the historical period produces a fascinating new picture of the composer...Essential.""--Choice ""Mendelssohn has always been something of an enigma. Was his motivation as a composer primarily Jewish or Christian? In this carefully reasoned re-examination of the documentary evidence, Jeffrey S. Sposato argues that the matter is much more complex than is usually presented. Paradoxically, Mendelssohn seems to have shared the common Anti-Semitic stance of Protestant Germany and only in later life moderated this position. This is an important--if somewhat disturbing--book that carefully distinguishes the various shades of gray that have been hitherto interpreted as either black or white, helping us to understand the cultural context of the man and his music, especially the larger choral works.""--Professor Robin A. Leaver, Westminster Choir College of Rider University and The Juilliard School ""Jeffrey Sposato's stimulating study is a major contribution to the debate about Mendelssohn's relationship with his Jewish heritage, which for more than 150 years has been characterized by obfuscation and prejudice. Through a careful and scholarly examination of the evidence, including a ground-breaking investigation of the process by which Mendelssohn selected and revised his oratorio texts, Sposato challenges many images of the composer that were reflected by the distorting mirror of racial, political, and moral agendas.""--Clive Brown, Professor of Applied Musicology, University of Leeds ""In his book, Sposato presents an enigmatic and multifaced personality of Mendelsohn which does not fit conveniently in either extreme religious classification. Sposato offers a substantial argument that in a utilitarian way will hopefully open a dialogue of polemics in Mendelssohn interpretation.""--Choral Journal ""A probing, impeccably researched investigation into Mendelssohn's sacred music and its subtext--the composer's mediation between his Judaic heritage and Protestant faith. Eloquently written and argued, The Price of Assimilation will encourage a fresh look at one of the most misunderstood, seminal figures of nineteenth-century music.""--R. Larry Todd, Professor of Music, Duke University ""Sposato's book makes a major contribution to Mendelssohn research and provides thought-provoking new interpretations of the composer's most public works. If only for the wealth of source information on the works at hand, The Price of Assimilation will prove a necessary resource for further scholarship on this repertoire. Beyond its utility, however, Sposato's intelligent treatment of critical cultural and biographical issues should continue to stir fruitful debate within nineteenth-century history and musicology. Wheth one understands Mendelssohn's religious self-identification as primarily Jewish, primarily Protestant, or somewhere in between, Sposato has cast considerable light on the relevant evidence and has delivered a valuable addition to Mendelssohn studies."" --Journal of the American Musicological Society" <br> A good part of the core of Sposato's work has become and will remain part of the conventional wisdom. --Donald Mintz, Music and Letters<p><br> A significant new book --Pittsburgh Post Gazette<p><br> Well researched and well written, this remarkable book revises, deepens, and, best of all, clarifies Mendelssohn's personal and professional responses to his position as a converted Jew in the first half of the 19th century...Sposato's careful study of Mendelssohn's biography, his manuscripts, and the historical period produces a fascinating new picture of the composer.... Essential. --CHOICE<p><br> Mendelssohn has always been something of an enigma. Was his motivation as a composer primarily Jewish or Christian? In this carefully reasoned re-examination of the documentary evidence, Jeffrey S. Sposato argues that the matter is much more complex than is usually presented. Paradoxically, Mendelssohn seems to have shared the common Anti-Semitic stance of Protestant Germany and only in lat ""A good part of the core of Sposato's work has become and will remain part of the conventional wisdom.""--Donald Mintz, Music and Letters ""A significant new book""--Pittsburgh Post Gazette ""Well researched and well written, this remarkable book revises, deepens, and, best of all, clarifies Mendelssohn's personal and professional responses to his position as a converted Jew in the first half of the 19th century...Sposato's careful study of Mendelssohn's biography, his manuscripts, and the historical period produces a fascinating new picture of the composer.... Essential.""--CHOICE ""Mendelssohn has always been something of an enigma. Was his motivation as a composer primarily Jewish or Christian? In this carefully reasoned re-examination of the documentary evidence, Jeffrey S. Sposato argues that the matter is much more complex than is usually presented. Paradoxically, Mendelssohn seems to have shared the common Anti-Semitic stance of Protestant Germany and only in later life moderated this position. This is an important--if somewhat disturbing--book that carefully distinguishes the various shades of gray that have been hitherto interpreted as either black or white, helping us to understand the cultural context of the man and his music, especially the larger choral works.""--Professor Robin A. Leaver, Westminster Choir College of Rider University and The Juilliard School ""In his book, Sposato presents an enigmatic and multifaced personality of Mendelsohn which does not fit conveniently in either extreme religious classification. Sposato offers a substantial argument that in a utilitarian way will hopefully open a dialogue of polemics in Mendelssohn interpretation.""--Choral Journal ""Jeffrey Sposato's stimulating study is a major contribution to the debate about Mendelssohn's relationship with his Jewish heritage, which for more than 150 years has been characterized by obfuscation and prejudice. Through a careful and scholarly examination of the evidence, including a ground-breaking investigation of the process by which Mendelssohn selected and revised his oratorio texts, Sposato challenges many images of the composer that were reflected by the distorting mirror of racial, political, and moral agendas.""--Clive Brown, Professor of Applied Musicology, University of Leeds ""A probing, impeccably researched investigation into Mendelssohn's sacred music and its subtext--the composer's mediation between his Judaic heritage and Protestant faith. Eloquently written and argued, The Price of Assimilation will encourage a fresh look at one of the most misunderstood, seminal figures of nineteenth-century music.""--R. Larry Todd, Professor of Music, Duke University ""A significant new book"" -- Pittsburgh Post Gazette ""Well researched and well written, this remarkable book revises, deepens, and, best of all, clarifies Mendelssohn's personal and professional responses to his position as a converted Jew in the first half of the 19th century...Sposato's careful study of Mendelssohn's biography, his manuscripts, and the historical period produces a fascinating new picture of the composer...Essential.""--Choice ""Mendelssohn has always been something of an enigma. Was his motivation as a composer primarily Jewish or Christian? In this carefully reasoned re-examination of the documentary evidence, Jeffrey S. Sposato argues that the matter is much more complex than is usually presented. Paradoxically, Mendelssohn seems to have shared the common Anti-Semitic stance of Protestant Germany and only in later life moderated this position. This is an important--if somewhat disturbing--book that carefully distinguishes the various shades of gray that have been hitherto interpreted as either black or white, helping us to understand the cultural context of the man and his music, especially the larger choral works.""--Professor Robin A. Leaver, Westminster Choir College of Rider University and The Juilliard School ""Jeffrey Sposato's stimulating study is a major contribution to the debate about Mendelssohn's relationship with his Jewish heritage, which for more than 150 years has been characterized by obfuscation and prejudice. Through a careful and scholarly examination of the evidence, including a ground-breaking investigation of the process by which Mendelssohn selected and revised his oratorio texts, Sposato challenges many images of the composer that were reflected by the distorting mirror of racial, political, and moral agendas.""--Clive Brown, Professor of Applied Musicology, University of Leeds ""In his book, Sposato presents an enigmatic and multifaced personality of Mendelsohn which does not fit conveniently in either extreme religious classification. Sposato offers a substantial argument that in a utilitarian way will hopefully open a dialogue of polemics in Mendelssohn interpretation.""--Choral Journal ""A probing, impeccably researched investigation into Mendelssohn's sacred music and its subtext--the composer's mediation between his Judaic heritage and Protestant faith. Eloquently written and argued, The Price of Assimilation will encourage a fresh look at one of the most misunderstood, seminal figures of nineteenth-century music.""--R. Larry Todd, Professor of Music, Duke University ""Sposato's book makes a major contribution to Mendelssohn research and provides thought-provoking new interpretations of the composer's most public works. If only for the wealth of source information on the works at hand, The Price of Assimilation will prove a necessary resource for further scholarship on this repertoire. Beyond its utility, however, Sposato's intelligent treatment of critical cultural and biographical issues should continue to stir fruitful debate within nineteenth-century history and musicology. Wheth one understands Mendelssohn's religious self-identification as primarily Jewish, primarily Protestant, or somewhere in between, Sposato has cast considerable light on the relevant evidence and has delivered a valuable addition to Mendelssohn studies."" --Journal of the American Musicological Society <br> A good part of the core of Sposato's work has become and will remain part of the conventional wisdom. --Donald Mintz, Music and Letters<br> A significant new book --Pittsburgh Post Gazette<br> Well researched and well written, this remarkable book revises, deepens, and, best of all, clarifies Mendelssohn's personal and professional responses to his position as a converted Jew in the first half of the 19th century...Sposato's careful study of Mendelssohn's biography, his manuscripts, and the historical period produces a fascinating new picture of the composer.... Essential. --CHOICE<br> Mendelssohn has always been something of an enigma. Was his motivation as a composer primarily Jewish or Christian? In this carefully reasoned re-examination of the documentary evidence, Jeffrey S. Sposato argues that the matter is much more complex than is usually presented. Paradoxically, Mendelssohn seems to have shared the common Anti-Semitic stance of Protestant Germany and only in later life m Author InformationJeffrey S. Sposato is Assistant Professor of Musicology, Moores School of Music, University of Houston Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |