Copyright
Margaret MehlPublished On
2024-05-29ISBN
Language
- English
Print Length
470 pages (xvi+456)Dimensions
Weight
Media
OCLC Number
1436679507THEMA
- AVLA
- AGA
- ABA
- AVM
BIC
- 1FPJ
- HBJF
- AVA
- AVH
- HBTB
BISAC
- MUS020000
- MUS023000
- MUS038000
- POL038000
- SOC026000
Keywords
- Japan in the 1870s-early 1920s
- Western powers
- Music
- Modernization
- Globalization
- Traditional Japanese music
Music and the Making of Modern Japan
Joining the Global Concert
Contents
Introduction
(pp. 1–28)- Margaret Mehl
- Margaret Mehl
- Margaret Mehl
3. The Case of Japan
(pp. 87–124)- Margaret Mehl
4. From Rites and Music to National Music
(pp. 127–138)- Margaret Mehl
- Margaret Mehl
6. Civilizing Citizens: Music Reform
(pp. 157–180)- Margaret Mehl
- Margaret Mehl
- Margaret Mehl
- Margaret Mehl
10. Foreign Actors: Kate I. Hansen
(pp. 293–344)- Margaret Mehl
11. The World in Sendai
(pp. 345–386)- Margaret Mehl
Conclusion
(pp. 387–404)- Margaret Mehl
Contributors
Margaret Mehl
(author)Margaret Mehl is a historian of modern Japan with a special interest in musical culture. She is currently an Associate Professor at the University of Copenhagen, having previously held appointments at the universities of Cambridge, Edinburgh, Stirling, and Berlin. As well as a doctorate from the University of Bonn, Margaret Mehl holds a Dr. Phil. (Habilitation) from the University of Copenhagen. She has lived and worked in Japan as a researcher on several occasions, where she has had affiliations with the University of Tokyo, and with Waseda University. Margaret Mehl has published widely on the history of historiography, education, and music in modern Japan. Her previous books include History and the State in Nineteenth-Century Japan (which has been translated into Japanese), Private Academies of Chinese Learning in Meiji Japan: The Decline and Transformation of the Kangaku Juku, and Not by Love Alone: The Violin in Japan, 1850–2010. When she is not reading, writing or teaching, Margaret Mehl enjoys playing her violin and has performed in amateur orchestras and chamber ensembles in several countries.