The grand narratives of European music history are informed by the
dichotomy of placements and displacements. Yet musicology has thus far
largely ignored the phenomenon of displacement and underestimated its
significance for musical landscapes and music history. Music and
Displacement: Diasporas, Mobilities, and Dislocations in Europe and
Beyond constitutes a pioneering volume that aims to fill this gap as it
explores the interactions between music and displacement in theoretical
and practical terms. Contributions by distinguished international
scholars address the theme through a wide range of case studies,
incorporating art, popular, folk, and jazz music and interacting with
areas, such as gender and post-colonial studies, critical theory,
migration, and diaspora. The book is structured in three
stages--silence, acculturation, and theory--that move from silence to
sound and from displacement to placement. The range of subject matter
within these sections is deliberately hybrid and mirrors the eclectic
nature of displacement itself, with case studies exploring Nazi
Anti-Semitism in musical displacement; musical life in the Jewish
community of Palestine; Mahler, Jewishness, and Jazz; the Irish Diaspora
in England; and German Exile studies, among others. Featuring articles
from such scholars as Ruth F. Davis, Sean Campbell, Jim Samson, Sydney
Hutchinson, and Europea series co-editor Philip V. Bohlman, the volume
exerts an appeal reaching beyond music and musicology to embrace all
areas in the humanities concerned with notions of displacement,
migration, and diaspora.