The Great Tradition and Its Legacy : : The Evolution of Dramatic and Musical Theater in Austria and Central Europe / / ed. by Michael Cherlin, Halina Filipowicz, Richard L. Rudolph.

Both dramatic and musical theater are part of the tradition that has made Austria - especially Vienna - and the old Habsburg lands synonymous with high culture in Central Europe. Many works, often controversial originally but now considered as classics, are still performed regularly in Vienna, Pragu...

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Bibliographic Details
MitwirkendeR:
HerausgeberIn:
Place / Publishing House:New York; , Oxford : : Berghahn Books, , [2003]
©2003
Year of Publication:2003
Language:English
Series:Austrian and Habsburg Studies ; 4
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (290 p.)
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Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • CONTENTS
  • List of Illustrations
  • Preface
  • Notes on Contributors
  • DRAMATIC THEATER
  • Introduction: Rethinking Drama and Theater in Austria and Central Europe
  • Part One: The Enlightenment and the “New Beginning”
  • 1. “By and By We Shall Have an Enlightened Populace”: Moral Optimism and the Fine Arts in Late-Eighteenth-Century Austria
  • 2. Taming a Transgressive National Hero: Tadeusz Kos´ciuszko and Nineteenth-Century Polish Drama
  • 3. Nestroy and His Naughty Children: A Plebeian Tradition in the Austrian Theater
  • 4. Pantomime, Dance, Sprachskepsis, and Physical Culture in German and Austrian Modernism
  • 5. Populism versus Elitism in Max Reinhardt’s Austrian Productions of the 1920s
  • Part Two: Post-Holocaust and Postmodern Theater
  • 6. Elfriede Jelinek’s Nora Project; or, What Happens When Nora Meets the Capitalists
  • 7. George Tabori’s Return to the Danube, 1987–1999
  • 8. Thomas Bernhard’s Heldenplatz: Artists and Societies beyond the Scandal
  • 9. Pulling the Pants Off History: Politics and Postmodernism in Thomas Bernhard’s Eve of Retirement
  • MUSICAL THEATER
  • Introduction: Conflict and Crosscurrents in Viennese Music
  • Part Three: The Emergence of the Classical Style
  • 10. Vienna as a Center of Ballet Reform in the Late Eighteenth Century
  • 11. The Viennese Singspiel, Haydn, and Mozart
  • 12. Displaying (Out)Rage: The Dilemma of Constancy in Mozart’s Operas
  • Part Four: Some Major Transformations of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
  • 13. Karl Goldmark’s Operas during the Directorship of Gustav Mahler
  • 14. A Break in the Scenic Traditions of the Vienna Court Opera: Alfred Roller and the Vienna Secession
  • 15. Schoenberg’s Music for the Theater
  • References
  • Index