Ports of Call -

Ports of Call

Central European and North American Culture/s in Motion
Buch | Softcover
2003
Peter Lang Gmbh, Internationaler Verlag Der Wissenschaften
978-3-631-50696-7 (ISBN)
94,35 inkl. MwSt
This volume collects papers put together by an interdisciplinary group of scholars, which explore how the two imaginary geo-cultural spaces "Central Europe" and "(North) America" have mutually attributed meanings to each other over the past two centuries, how traveling images of an "othered" cultural space - inserted into specific regional, national and social contexts and appropriated for negotiations of cultural identity and belonging as well as exclusion and colonization - have laid the basis for a cultural essentialism which thinks culture through space and negotiates cultural status through de-historicized notions of place and territory. It particularly focuses on processes of motion and travel which helped to create these images and discusses in individual case studies a wide variety of cultural phenomena - ranging from music to film, from tourism to world fairs - while sharing the common concern to explore how motion through space - whether physical or imaginary - helped shape, crystallize and negotiate images of the cultural other in contact or transit zones where people, images and cultures meet in asymmetrical relations of domination and subordination, and where tourists, exiles, travelers, displaced commodities and foreign cultural practices generate powerful, as well as potentially subversive, visions and imaginings. Thus this volume invites to find individual paths and ports in/between the subjects presented and in a way to contribute to, to follow up the web of exchange represented by its authors, themselves a (mostly) virtual community of researchers.

The Editors: Susan Ingram has a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of Alberta and is currently working on a postdoctoral project in the History Department at the University of Victoria on the technologies of self-representation. In addition to women's writing and auto/biography, she has also published on topics in Translation Studies.
Markus Reisenleitner has a Ph.D. from the University of Vienna and joined the Department of Cultural Studies at the Lingnan University Hong-Kong in the capacity of Associate Professor in 2001. Areas of interest include cultural history and cultural studies (urban studies, theories of space, place and identity, popular culture in public entertainment and spectacle, popular literature and themed environments).
Cornelia Szabó-Knotik has a Ph.D. in Musicology from the University of Vienna and is Associate Professor at the Institute of Analysis, Theory and History of Music at the University of Music in Vienna. Interested in the aesthetic content as well as the social and cultural importance of music, her main subjects are the history of music-life, the many phenomena of reception, including the importance of new media (film) for the way the musical heritage is confronted.

lt;i>Contents: Susan Ingram/Markus Reisenleitner/Cornelia Szabó-Knotik: Introduction - Barbara Boisits: Old Austria Meets the New World: The Painter, Writer and Musician, Franz Hölzlhuber (1826-1898) - Cornelia Szabó-Knotik: Telling His Story: Experiences of Exile and Return Shaping Max Graf's Cultural Agenda - Michael Saffle: Traveling Tales: The Trapp Family Singers and Maria von Trapp's Post-World War II Immigration Narratives - Srdja Pavlovic: Imagining America: Montenegrin Immigrants and the Displacement of Identity - Natalia Shostak: Making Ukrainian House Calls: On Diasporic Tourism and Rituals of Homecoming - James Deaville: I' bin ein Kitchenerer: Music and Identity in North American Oktoberfest Practices - Susan Ingram: Meet Me at the Fair: The Wonderful World of Old Austria - Anita Mayer-Hirzberger: Voting for Shifts in Austria: How the Ständestaat (1934-1938) Used Musical Clichés to Improve the Country's Image Abroad - Nada Bezic: Americans in Croatian Operetta and Musical Comedy - Wladimir Fischer: Traveling Tunes: Pumping Up the Volume of X-Yugoslav Pop Music in the Viennese Diaspora - Alexandra Seibel: The Viennese Girl between Vienna and Hollywood: Tropes of Femininity in Erich von Stroheim's The Wedding March, Jacques Feyder's Daybreak and Max Ophüls's Liebelei - Markus Reisenleitner: The American Traveling Detective and the Exotic City: Pépé le Moko, Macao and The Third Man - Andriy Zayarnyuk: From Russia with Truth: Traveling to America in the Post-Soviet Russian Imagination.

Erscheint lt. Verlag 17.12.2003
Verlagsort Berlin
Sprache englisch
Maße 148 x 210 mm
Gewicht 390 g
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Musik
Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Kulturgeschichte
Sozialwissenschaften Ethnologie Allgemeines / Lexika
Schlagworte 19. /20. Jahrhundert • American • Call • Central • Cornelia • Culture • Culture-Forms and Practices • European • Graf, Max • Hölzlhuber, Franz • Immigration • Ingram • Knotik • Markus • Motion • North • ports • Reisenleitner • Susan • Szabó
ISBN-10 3-631-50696-1 / 3631506961
ISBN-13 978-3-631-50696-7 / 9783631506967
Zustand Neuware
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