Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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"Modernism", "Elitism", and "The Working Classes"
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"Modernism", "Elitism", and "The Working Classes"
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Originally posted by Mal View Post. . . Do working class people read Finnegans Wake?
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Originally posted by Mal View PostCocteau was upset with Stravinsky using Latin for the narration,
Cocteau worked with both Stravinsky (making radical changes to his text to suit the composer's conception of the work) and with Jean Danielou (who made the Latin translation), writing to the latter (on 8th Jan, 1926) "I await your first text with the greatest impatience" ... and then eleven days later, making further adjustments to his own text on Stravinsky's insistence.
... but Stravinsky insisted on Latin, probably because of his adherence to Russian Orthodoxy. So Eisler's comment perhaps relates more to Stravinsky getting closer to the church, than anything to do with Latin per se.
Abandoning modernism seems, to me, be a way of getting closer to the working class. Do working class people read Finnegans Wake?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThe "narration" isn't in Latin - the original is in French, and this is translated into the language of whichever country the performance is taking place in. The sung sections are in Latin,
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI don't understand this - "Russian Orthodoxy" uses Church Slavonic, not Latin, doesn't it?
"The Latin text was apparently a distancing device, perhaps also with a sacred dimension, as with the Latin of the Mass, or the Old Slavonic of the Russian Orthodox liturgy in which Stravinsky had been brought up."
<p>Sir John Eliot Gardiner conducts the LSO on this his first release for LSO Live, Stravinsky’s <i>Oedipus Rex</i> and <i>Apollon musagète</i>. Also featured on the release are the Gentlemen of the Monteverdi Choir, considered one of the world’s leading choirs, and a mix of international and home-grown soloists including Jennifer Johnston and Stuart Skelton. French actress Fanny Ardant, who has appeared in over 50 motion pictures, takes the role of narrator.</p> <p><i>Oedipus Rex</i> and <i>Apollon musagète</i> are both ancient Greek themed works by Stravinsky. The rich string harmonies and textures in the ballet score of <i>Apollon musagète</i> are pleasantly mesmerizing, expressive and calmly indulgent. In contrast, the dramatic and hauntingly compelling opera-oratorio <i>Oedipus Rex</i> is composed of an assemblage of monumental and powerful sounds, such as playful woodwinds, robust brass and agile strings, with magnificent vocals from the choir and soloists.</p>
But I'm not sure why he chose Latin rather than Church Slavonic, maybe he wanted some distancing from his Slavonic roots, while maintaining the spiritual and classical dimensions.
Of course there will always be exceptions, but I doubt many working class people have read Finnegans Wake. I think the argument that modernist art is more about excluding working class people than, somehow, including them is valid. The point is made at length in John Carey's "The Intellectuals and the Masses". Some critics on the far left, like Max Eastman, also accuse modernism of being obscurantist (see the latest copy of the TLS...)
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostIn his preface to the B&H score, Malcolm MacDonald tells us, "Stravinsky wanted Latin because of its monumental quality, and because its distancing effect would allow the audience to concentrate on the tragic action."
I don't get this "monumental" argument, wasn't the language of Tolstoy monumental enough for him? The idea of translating the narration into the language of the country in which it is performed seems an excellent one. But then not translating the main body of the text just seems another incitement to riot. Wasn't the risk of no one listening to it considered more important than the risk of vulgarisation? It all smacks of modernist elitism, I suspect he didn't want the general public to understand it so he and his artistic friends could remain part of an elite club that were the only ones who could understand such works. Has there been an all English performance of the work?
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Originally posted by Mal View Post
Of course there will always be exceptions, but I doubt many working class people have read Finnegans Wake. I think the argument that modernist art is more about excluding working class people than, somehow, including them is valid. The point is made at length in John Carey's "The Intellectuals and the Masses". Some critics on the far left, like Max Eastman, also accuse modernism of being obscurantist (see the latest copy of the TLS...)
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Originally posted by Mal View PostGood point, but he may still be using Latin as a distancing device with a spiritual edge. Some support for my point:
"The Latin text was apparently a distancing device, perhaps also with a sacred dimension, as with the Latin of the Mass, or the Old Slavonic of the Russian Orthodox liturgy in which Stravinsky had been brought up."
But I'm not sure why he chose Latin rather than Church Slavonic, maybe he wanted some distancing from his Slavonic roots, while maintaining the spiritual and classical dimensions.- and there's also the Roman Catholic milieu of France in the 1920s and the work of Maritain in particular, which Stravinsky was at least partly attracted to. Latin is also much more familiar to choirs than is Church Slavonic, of course.
Of course there will always be exceptions, but I doubt many working class people have read Finnegans Wake.
I think the argument that modernist art is more about excluding working class people than, somehow, including them is valid. The point is made at length in John Carey's "The Intellectuals and the Masses".
Some critics on the far left, like Max Eastman, also accuse modernism of being obscurantist (see the latest copy of the TLS...)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI don't doubt it that there are such critics (although I'm puzzled that you describe the author of Reflections on the Failure of Socialism as being "on the far left")...
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Originally posted by Mal View PostEastman moved to the right, but was on the far left when he made his attack on modernism for being obscurantist. Carey specifies that modernism is the main target of his attack in the first paragraph of the preface of his book. Although, indeed, his first sentence indicates that his book is also about the response of the English intelligentsia in general. He does criticise several other modernists besides Woolf (the usual suspects: Joyce, T.S. Eliot, Pound...)
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For me, modernism is full of utopian potentialities that seek to transcend and revolt against the commodification of art.
I wouldn't call it elitist... in the same way that acknowledging the expertise of one's medical doctor is not elitist. Marx celebrated the achievements of the bourgeoisie and medicine is just one example where you would be insane to dismiss it as 'elitist'... Socialism seeks to make everyone privileged, in their own way... what the USSR was was state-capitalist, every Marxist knew or knows that genuine communism wasn't possible in a society which wasn't wholly rid of feudalism.
I'd consider myself working class, even though my dad's side is middle-class, because I was brought up by my mother, who is working class. And I've even read Ulysses and some but not all of Finnegans Wake... it's slightly patronising to suggest that working class, any more than middle class people don't get modernism. As things like bebop and Charlie Parker show, under highly progressive, redistributive tax regimes, the less well-off are likely to make their own kind of modernism.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostFor me, modernism is full of utopian potentialities that seek to transcend and revolt against the commodification of art.
I wouldn't call it elitist... in the same way that acknowledging the expertise of one's medical doctor is not elitist. Marx celebrated the achievements of the bourgeoisie and medicine is just one example where you would be insane to dismiss it as 'elitist'... Socialism seeks to make everyone privileged, in their own way... what the USSR was was state-capitalist, every Marxist knew or knows that genuine communism wasn't possible in a society which wasn't wholly rid of feudalism.
I'd consider myself working class, even though my dad's side is middle-class, because I was brought up by my mother, who is working class. And I've even read Ulysses and some but not all of Finnegans Wake... it's slightly patronising to suggest that working class, any more than middle class people don't get modernism. As things like bebop and Charlie Parker show, under highly progressive, redistributive tax regimes, the less well-off are likely to make their own kind of modernism.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post... It's not difficult to transition from a Stalinist position regarding anything experimental as elitist and anti-working class to what Richard and I would describe as a "capitalist realist" one that claims the market to be free and consumer choice as an almost divine right. As easy as a Soviet bureaucrat changing into a Christian Orthodox-supporting Russian nationalist!
Imagine teaching a class of Polish kids and they, knowing you don't speak Polish, insist on "experimenting" by answering you only in Polish. They say they can only express themselves properly in their own language. But you suspect they are just winding you up for "a laugh", and it's "letter to the parents" time.
In the case of Stravinsky's Oedipus, I don't really want to play this modernist game, I especially don't want to struggle with Latin! Go and see the headmaster Mr Stravinsky.
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