9780190877767-0190877766-Histories of the Musical: An Oxford Handbook of the American Musical, Volume 1 (Oxford Handbooks)

Histories of the Musical: An Oxford Handbook of the American Musical, Volume 1 (Oxford Handbooks)

ISBN-13: 9780190877767
ISBN-10: 0190877766
Edition: 1
Author: Raymond Knapp, Stacy Wolf, Mitchell Morris
Publication date: 2018
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Paperback 240 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780190877767
ISBN-10: 0190877766
Edition: 1
Author: Raymond Knapp, Stacy Wolf, Mitchell Morris
Publication date: 2018
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Paperback 240 pages

Summary

Histories of the Musical: An Oxford Handbook of the American Musical, Volume 1 (Oxford Handbooks) (ISBN-13: 9780190877767 and ISBN-10: 0190877766), written by authors Raymond Knapp, Stacy Wolf, Mitchell Morris, was published by Oxford University Press in 2018. With an overall rating of 3.5 stars, it's a notable title among other History & Criticism (Music) books. You can easily purchase or rent Histories of the Musical: An Oxford Handbook of the American Musical, Volume 1 (Oxford Handbooks) (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used History & Criticism books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

The American musical is a paradox. On stage or screen, musicals at once hold a dominant and a contested place in the worlds of entertainment, art, and scholarship. Born from a mélange of performance forms that included opera and operetta, vaudeville and burlesque, minstrelsy and jazz, musicals have always sought to amuse more than instruct, and to make money more than make political change. In spite of their unapologetic commercialism, though, musicals have achieved supreme artistry and have influenced culture as much as if not more than any other art form in America, including avant-garde and high art on the one hand, and the full range of popular and commercial art on the other. Reflecting, refracting, and shaping U.S. culture since the early twentieth century, musicals converse with shifting dynamics of gender and sexuality, ethnicity and race, and the very question of what it means to be American and to be human. The chapters gathered in this book, Volume I of the reissued Oxford Handbook, explore the American musical from both the outside and the inside. This first volume concentrates in particular on large-scale, more philosophical issues of relevance to the genre, considering issues of historical situations and formal procedure as they bear on the narratives we make concerning productions and performers, artists and audiences, commerce and context. The first four essays discuss ways of defining histories and texts, and apprehending the formal choices of singers and dancers; the second group of four take up the subtle challenges of the genre's signal transformations out of minstrelsy and Tin Pan Alley to "integration" and beyond.
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