EUTERPE IN FURS: RUSSIAN MUSICAL CULTURE OF THE NINETEENTH AND TWENTIETH CENTURIES
March 4-5, 2004
"Russian Musical Culture of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries" is a two-day symposium devoted to the discussion of Russian music in its relations to literature, theater, visual arts, anthropology, social history, philosophy, and other relevant areas.
Thursday, March 4, 7:30 pm
Penn Humanities Forum, 3619 Locust Walk
Concert of Russian chamber music for guitar by Oleg Timofeev
Friday, March 5, 11:00 am
Max Kade Center, Room 329-A, 3401 Walnut Street
Symposium on Russian Musical Culture
Symposium Participants
Boris Gasparov, Columbia University
"Farewell to the Enchanted Garden: Pushkin, Nicholas' s Russia, and Glinka's Ruslan and Ludmila."
Oleg Timofeyev, University of Iowa
"The Complex Topography of Ruslan and Ludmila: Italian Opera, Exotic Neighbors, and Glinka's Search for `Russian Music'"
Kevin Platt, University of Pennsylvania
"Ivan the Terrible in Opera, Arts, and Politics"
David MacFadyen, UCLA
"It Flooded the Room and Burst Through the Doors: Some Aspects of Music in
Twentieth-Century Russian Storytelling"
Caryl Emerson, Princeton University
"Shostakovich and the Russian Literary Tradition: Gogol-Dostoevsky"
Simon Morrison, Princeton University
"Abram Room and Prokofiev's Unknown Film Score Tonya"
Andrew Baruch Wachtel, Northwestern University
"Improving a Bad Text: Schnitke's Life with an Idiot"
Discussants: Benjamin Nathans and Liliane Weissberg, University of Pennsylvania