Time's Echo
The Second World War, the Holocaust, and the Music of Remembrance
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- 18,99 €
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- 18,99 €
Descrizione dell’editore
SHORTLISTED FOR THE BAILLIE GIFFORD PRIZE FOR NON-FICTION 2023
'Profoundly moving.' EDMUND DE WAAL
'A work of searching scholarship, acute critical observation, philosophical heft, and deep feeling.' ALEX ROSS
'A rare book: extraordinarily powerful - magisterial, meticulously rich and unexpected, deeply affecting and human.' PHILIPPE SANDS
A remarkable and stirring account of how music acts as a witness to history and a medium of cultural memory in the post-Holocaust world.
When it comes to how societies commemorate their own distant dreams and catastrophes, we often think of books, archives, or memorials carved from stone. But in Time's Echo, Jeremy Eichler makes a revelatory case for the power of music as culture's memory, an art form uniquely capable of carrying forward meaning from the past.
Eichler shows how four towering composers - Richard Strauss, Arnold Schoenberg, Benjamin Britten and Dmitri Shostakovich - lived through the era of the Second World War and the Holocaust and later transformed their experiences into deeply moving works of music, scores that carry forward the echoes of lost time. A lyrical narrative full of insight and compassion, this book deepens how we think about the legacies of war, the presence of the past, and the profound possibilities of art in our lives today.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Boston Globe music critic Eichler contends in his masterful debut that the classical compositions of Arnold Schoenberg, Benjamin Britten, Dmitri Shostakovich, and Richard Strauss "possess a unique and often underappreciated power" to connect us to the "shocking and unassimilable past" of the Holocaust. Expertly detailing each composer's life and career, particularly their wartime experiences, Eichler argues that "like a relay station from the past," their music "carries forward an essential memory of the... Shoah"; he doesn't just approach the music on its "own terms," but as a direct "encounter" with history. Having fled Nazi Germany for America in 1933, Schoenberg "assume the sacred task of memorializing the unfathomable loss" in his powerful 1947 composition A Survivor from Warsaw. Eichler, drawing on Schoenberg's notes and biography, determines that this cantata is not only a memorial for murdered people but a lament for the dead dream of a shared German-Jewish culture. Decades later, British pacifist Britten composed his 1962 War Requiem, which draws on the WWI poetry of Wilfred Owen to challenge the idea that there is any nobility in war; Eichler traces how this displacement of WWI history onto WWII is an echo of Britain's initial postwar attempts to minimize the Holocaust. In vivid, luminous prose, Eichler makes clear that to actively listen to these compositions is "to perform an act of empathy angled toward the past" and reveal latent emotions at their moment of creation. It's a moving declaration of the power of music to transmit human feeling across time.