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Jewish music and totalitarianism in the post-stalinist Soviet Union

  • The years 1953 through the 1970s in the Soviet Union have been called the era of the “Jews of silence.” And yet through various types of musical activities, certain parts of the Jewish population in the USSR were able to maintain a collective cultural identity in the public sphere. Captured as a musical community, this collectivity also extended to non-Jewish composers, musicians, and audiences. As such it thematicized, performed, represented, and received Jewishness, through Yiddish theater and songs, art music, and popular music. Concerts and works conceived for the Soviet stages demonstrate that Jewishness mattered, with music taking on new symbolism and becoming imbued with new meaning. This chapter focuses on the presence (and absence) of Jewish music in the public sphere, specifically in the concert hall and other stages in the post-Stalinist Soviet Union.

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Author details:Jascha NemtsovGND
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197528624.013.12
ISBN:978-0-19-752865-5
ISBN:978-0-19-752862-4
Title of parent work (English):The Oxford handbook of Jewish music studies
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Place of publishing:New York
Publication type:Part of a Book
Language:English
Year of first publication:2023
Publication year:2023
Release date:2024/09/17
Tag:Holocaust; Soviet Union; Yiddish song; Yiddish theater; art music; popular music; post-Stalinism; totalitarianism
First page:309
Last Page:335
Organizational units:Philosophische Fakultät / Institut für Jüdische Theologie
DDC classification:2 Religion / 20 Religion / 200 Religion
7 Künste und Unterhaltung / 78 Musik / 780 Musik
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