The Congress for Cultural Freedom, La Musica Nel XX Secolo, and Aesthetic "Othering": An Archival Investigation

File(s)
Date
2012-12-01Author
Pahl, Shannon E.
Department
Music
Advisor(s)
Gillian Rodger
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Between 1950 and 1967, the Congress for Cultural Freedom, an organization of anti-totalitarian intellectuals funded by the United States government, hosted conferences and festivals regarding the pursuit of intellectual freedom. In 1952 and 1954, the Congress for Cultural Freedom hosted two music events. While the first festival has been researched considerably, the 1954 conference has not been documented comparably. While unexplored, this conference has been the cause of much speculation on the political connotation of dodecaphonic and avant-garde techniques in postwar Europe. This project explores archival evidence related to the 1954 conference, with a focus on internal memoranda, correspondence, program lists, budgets, and invitation lists from the Congress for Cultural Freedom. This information is synthesized to provide logistical information regarding conference organization as well as the political ramifications of the conference.
Subject
Anti-Communism
Avant-Garde Music
Cold War
Congress for Cultural Freedom
Dodecaphonic Music
Nicolas Nabokov
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/93759Type
thesis
