Undergraduate Course: Special History in Music: Mendelssohn and the making of 19th-century Musical Culture (MUSI10083)
Course Outline
School | Edinburgh College of Art |
College | College of Humanities and Social Science |
Course type | Standard |
Availability | Available to all students |
Credit level (Normal year taken) | SCQF Level 10 (Year 3 Undergraduate) |
Credits | 20 |
Home subject area | Music |
Other subject area | None |
Course website |
None |
Taught in Gaelic? | No |
Course description | Felix Mendelssohn is a central figure in nineteenth-century musical life and one of the founders of the modern institution of art music. His career, music and reception form an invaluable prism through which many of the crucial debates in music from the last two hundred years may be critically examined. These include the relation between musical meaning and social function, programme and absolute music, organicism, the reciprocal notions of classicism and Romanticism, modernism and historicism, and the role political ideology, racism and musical ignorance may play in a composer's reception. And last but not least, Mendelssohn's music still forms a fascinating cornerstone of the classical repertoire, one which is richly rewarding of careful study. |
Information for Visiting Students
Pre-requisites | Visiting students should have at least three Music courses at grade B or above (or be predicted to obtain this). We will only consider University/College level courses. |
Displayed in Visiting Students Prospectus? | No |
Course Delivery Information
Not being delivered |
Learning Outcomes
On completion of this course, the student will be able to:
1. Discuss specific important compositions of Mendelssohn in appropriate detail.
2. Explain the historical provenance of several key themes in music aesthetics.
3. Evaluate the role of political and racial ideology in altering a composer's reception.
4. Assess and revise narratives of modern music historiography. |
Assessment Information
1) One 3,000-word essay, worth 45% of total course mark, due in Week 7 of the course.
2) One class presentation on specific work of student's choice, worth 10% of total course mark, given in Weeks 9-10 of the course.
2) One 3,000-word essay, worth 45% of total course mark, due at the end of Semester 1.
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Special Arrangements
None |
Additional Information
Academic description |
1. Explore important pieces by Mendelssohn in musical detail.
2. Engage with a range of key themes in music historiography as they intersect with the life, music, and reception of this composer.
3. Critically examine the role played by factors such as race, religion, politics and later ideologies in musicological assessments of a composer's work - and the reasons for their persistence.
4. Rethink Mendelssohn's position within 19th-century music and culture.
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Syllabus |
1. Wunderkind: Mendelssohn's musical education and early works.
2. Modernist: Cyclic form, organicism, poetic overtures and programme music.
3. Historian: Revival of St Matthew Passion, building of the Western musical canon.
4. Traveller: Scotland and Italy, landscape painting, exotic, national, or universal?
5. Society: Ethics, Religion, concert life, audiences and gender.
6. Classicist: Instrumental form, music and the limits of language after Beethoven.
7. Late Style? On late style as a musical and biographical category; Op. 80; Death.
8. Reception: Politics, anti-Semitism and Nazism. Mendelssohn as case-study for problems in music historiography.
9. Student Presentations
10. Student Presentations
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Transferable skills |
Not entered |
Reading list |
Botstein, Leon: 'The Aesthetics of Assimilation and Affirmation: Reconstructing the Career of Felix Mendelssohn', in Mendelssohn and his World, ed. R. Larry Todd (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1991), 5-42.
Brown, Clive: A Portrait of Mendelssohn (New Haven & London: Yale University Press, 2003).
Cooper, John Michael: Heathen Muse: The Walpurgis Night, Goethe, and Mendelssohn (Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 2007).
Garratt, James: 'Mendelssohn's Babel:
Romanticism and the Poetics of Translation', Music & Letters, 80 (1999), 23-49.
Grey, Thomas: 'Tableaux vivants: Landscape, History Painting, and the Visual Imagination in Mendelssohn¿s Orchestral Music', 19th-Century Music, 21 (1997), 38-76.
Kramer, Lawrence: 'Felix culpa: Goethe and the image of Mendelssohn', in R. Larry Todd (ed.), Mendelssohn Studies (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992), pp. 64-79.
Sposato, Jeffrey S.: 'Creative Writing: The [Self-] Identification of Mendelssohn as Jew', The Musical Quarterly, 82 (1998), 190-209.
Taylor, Benedict: Mendelssohn, Time and Memory: The Romantic Conception of Cyclic Form (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011).
Todd, R. Larry: Mendelssohn: A Life in Music (New York: Oxford University Press, 2003).
Vitercik, Gregory: 'Mendelssohn the Progressive', The Journal of Musicological Research, 8 (1989), 333-74.
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Study Abroad |
Not entered |
Study Pattern |
Ten two-hour seminars. |
Keywords | Mendelssohn, 19th-century music, musical canon, historicism, Classicism and Romanticism, absolute mu |
Contacts
Course organiser | Dr Elaine Kelly
Tel: (0131 6)50 8248
Email: Elaine.Kelly@ed.ac.uk |
Course secretary | Miss Annabelle Evans
Tel: (0131 6)50 2422
Email: Annabelle.Evans@ed.ac.uk |
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