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Article Excerpt The Composer as Intellectual: Music and Ideology in France 1914-1940. By Jane Fulcher. New York: Oxford University Press, 2005. [xiv, 473 p. ISBN 0-19-517473-9. $74.] Index, bibliography.
Since the day in 1792 when rebel troops entered the Tuilleries Gardens singing the Marseillaise, music has been linked to revolution in the French imagination. But what of the connection between music and politics when passions are cooler and the times less obviously explosive? In her two-volume study of music and politics in France during the Third Republic, Jane Fulcher aims to address this question and illuminate its importance to one of the most significant periods in French history. In the first installment, French Cultural Politics and Music: From the Dreyfus Affair to the First World War (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999) she traced the tensions between left-wing republicans and the right-wing nationalists who ultimately held sway over them, and she worked to reveal the ways in which this political dynamic played out in musical culture between 1894 and 1914. Now comes the sequel, The Composer as Intellectual: Music and Ideology in France, 1914-1940, which proposes to follow the entwined trails of politics and music from the declaration of war in the summer of 1914 to the Nazi occupation a quarter of a century later. Aiming to "reintegrate two previously separated histories--that of official politics and culture ... with that of musical, stylistic development" (p. 17), Fulcher focuses on composers who qualify in her estimation as "intellectuals," with the dual goal of unveiling the ideological orientations implicated in their works and demonstrating the ways in which their compositions were appropriated for political purposes.
Perhaps to an even greater extent than was the case in the two decades covered in Fulcher's first volume, the years considered here saw a complex and shifting series of political alignments in France, as well as wholesale changes in national political sentiment. The war itself sparked complicated and extremist political responses; in its wake the French government reeled and the French people struggled to achieve a consensus about the nation's future. The Versailles Treaty of 1919 left France not only devastated but impoverished and desperate for the payment of German reparations, and as those funds failed to materialize in the 1920s the deepening monetary crisis culminated in the steep devaluation of the franc. With economic concerns as a flashpoint, control of government was held alternately by iterations of the right-wing Bloc national (1919-24; 1926-32) and the more liberal Cartel des gauches (1924-26; 1932-34). These governments were fairly moderate, but more extremist politics took hold in 1936 with the ascent...
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