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Huju

Traditional Opera in Modern Shanghai
Buch | Hardcover
288 Seiten
2003
Oxford University Press (Verlag)
978-0-19-726273-3 (ISBN)
74,80 inkl. MwSt
An account of Huju, a Shanghai operatic tradition which blends music and acting with portrayal of the lives of ordinary people, this study follows the genre as it develops in China's largest city from rural entertainment to urban ballad, revolutionary drama, and contemporary opera.
China has over three hundred distinct styles of music drama, from exorcism theatre to farce, historical romance, and shadow puppetry. This study considers one of the newer operatic forms. Established just two centuries ago, huju (Shanghai opera), is renowned for its portrayal of ordinary people, not the emperors, courtesans, and heroes of older forms. Acting and make-up aim for realism rather than symbolism, and stories deal with contemporaneous themes: the struggles of lovers to marry, women's rights after the Communist revolution (1949), and life under the new social order established by Deng Xiaoping's reforms in the 1980s. Music ranges from local folksong to syncretic adoptions of Western popular music.
Jonathan Stock is an authority on Chinese music, with previous books on Chinese flute and violin solos and Abing, a twentieth-century composer. Adding to his extensive research on Chinese music, Stock's eighteen months of fieldwork in Shanghai allows him to interweave material from historical reports, sound recordings, live performance, and the first-hand accounts of three generations of singers into a study of a unique Chinese opera form seen equally as historical tradition, venue for social action, and forum for musical creativity.
Assessing first the roots of huju in local folksong and ballad, he looks at the enduring role of emotional expressivity. He next focuses on the rise of actresses, laying out a specially 'musical' reading of gendered performance. Further chapters reverse conventional ethnomusicological arguments that music constructs place by looking at how Shanghai's institutions before 1949 shaped the environment within which troupes developed new dramatic materials and competed for work. In considering reforms post-1949, the author shows how the infusion of explicit political content actually weakened the expressive impact of these dramas. Finally, developments since 1980 are reviewed. The book includes songs and illustrations of performance styles.
An innovative combination of urban and historical ethnomusicology, the book's findings will engage the historian of China and general scholar of music alike.

Jonathan Stock lectures in music at the University of Sheffield where he establishd the ethnomusicology programme, and is past Chairman of the British Forum for Ethnomusicology. He has been awarded a Westrup Prize for a recent article (2002) that appeared in Music and Letters

Introduction ; The Rise of Local Opera form in east China, up to 1920 ; Female roles and the Rise of Actresses, 1915-c.1950 ; Place and Music: Local Opera in Shanghai, 1912-49 ; Huju and the politics of revolution, post-1949 ; Ethnomusicological Research in an Urban Setting

Erscheint lt. Verlag 1.5.2003
Reihe/Serie British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship Monographs
Zusatzinfo 47 illustrations including 2 maps, photographs, line drawings, sheet music, and tables
Verlagsort Oxford
Sprache englisch
Maße 164 x 243 mm
Gewicht 662 g
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Musik Klassik / Oper / Musical
Kunst / Musik / Theater Musik Musiktheorie / Musiklehre
ISBN-10 0-19-726273-2 / 0197262732
ISBN-13 978-0-19-726273-3 / 9780197262733
Zustand Neuware
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