A
Zoom talk on February 19 at 4 p.m., presented by the Music Department,
the German Department, American Studies, and the Comparative Race and
Ethnicity Studies Program.
What
has classical music meant to Black people? Why have African Americans
listened to and performed a genre of music that many Americans now
consider to be white, elitist, and Eurocentric? Such accusations aren't
inaccurate: for example, African Americans represent only 1.8 percent of
all orchestra musicians today. In this presentation, Professor Kira
Thurman turns to the past to consider how African Americans made
classical music a meaningful part of their lives. Examining the lives
and careers of intellectuals such as W.E.B. DuBois and classical
musicians such as Marian Anderson, Thurman argues that African Americans
incorporated art music into their Black international and Black
diasporic politics. Looking beyond America's shores, they found a larger
and vibrant Black history of classical music that they could also
claim.
Bio
Kira
Thurman is an assistant professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures
and History at the University of Michigan. A classically-trained
pianist who grew up in Vienna, Austria, Thurman earned her PhD in
history from the University of Rochester with a minor field in
musicology from the Eastman School of Music. Her research focuses on two
topics that occasionally converge: the relationship between music and
German national identity, and Central Europe's historical and
contemporary relationship with the Black diaspora. She is the recipient
of many awards and fellowships, including a Fulbright fellowship to
Germany, the Berlin Prize from the American Academy of Berlin, and a
residential fellowship at the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) in
Princeton, New Jersey. Her article, "Black Venus, White Bayreuth: Race,
Sexuality, and the De-Politicization of Wagner" won the German Studies
Association's DAAD prize for best article on German history in 2014. Her
book,
Singing Like Germans: Black Musicians in the Land of Bach, Beethoven and Brahms,
is forthcoming with Cornell University Press. A firm believer in public
engagement, Thurman has published articles in magazines such as
The New Yorker,
served as a consultant for PBS documentaries and public radio
projects, and has worked with different orchestras, opera houses, and
music ensembles on programming and public education. Together with
colleagues across the United States and Europe and with the support of
the German Historical Institute in Washington, D.C., she runs the public
history website,
blackcentraleurope.com.
Dial-In Information
To join, click on this link. [https://reed-edu.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJwodeypqTsoE9ZmnOf0xIznPsYLXncKpUGh]
Friday, February 19, 2021 at 4:00pm
to 5:30pm
Virtual Event
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