Klezmer in Europe has been a controversial topic
ever since this traditional Jewish wedding music made it
to the concert halls and discos of Berlin, Warsaw,
Budapest and Prague. Played mostly by non-Jews and for
non-Jews, it was hailed as "fakelore," "Jewish
Disneyland" and even "cultural necrophilia."
Klezmer's Afterlife is the first book to
investigate this fascinating music scene in Central
Europe, giving voice to the musicians, producers and
consumers of the resuscitated klezmer. Contesting common
hypotheses about the klezmer revival in Germany and
Poland stemming merely from feelings of guilt which
emerged in the years following the Holocaust, author
Magdalena Waligorska investigates the consequences of
the klezmer boom on the people who staged it and places
where it occurred. Offering not only a documentation of
the klezmer revival in two of its European headquarters
(Kraków and Berlin), but also an analysis of the Jewish
/ non-Jewish encounter it generates, Waligorska
demonstrates how the klezmer revival replicates and
reinvents the image of the Jew in Polish and German
popular culture, how it becomes a soundtrack to
Holocaust commemoration and how it is used as a shining
example of successful cultural policy by local
officials. Drawing on a variety of fields including
musicology, ethnomusicology, history, sociology, and
cultural studies, Klezmer's Afterlife will
appeal to a wide range scholars and students studying
Jewish culture, and cultural relations in post-Holocaust
central Europe, as well as general readers interested in
klezmer music and music revivals more generally.
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