Skip to main content
Menu
Contents
Singing Like Germans: Singing Like Germans
Singing Like Germans
Singing Like Germans
Visibility
Show the following:
Annotations
Yours
Others
Your highlights
Resources
Show all
Reader Appearance
Adjust appearance:
Font
Font style
Serif
Sans-serif
Decrease font size
Increase font size
Decrease font size
Increase font size
Color Scheme
Light
Dark
Annotation contrast
abc
Low
abc
High
Margins
Increase text margins
Decrease text margins
Reset to Defaults
Search
Enter search criteria
Execute search
Search within:
chapter
text
project
Sign In
avatar
Edit Profile
Notifications
Privacy
Log Out
Project Home
Singing Like Germans
Projects
Sign In
Learn more about
Manifold
Notes
Close
table of contents
Acknowledgments
Note on Translation
Introduction
Part I: 1870–1914
1. How Beethoven Came to Black America: German Musical Universalism and Black Education after the Civil War
2. African American Intellectual and Musical Migration to the Kaiserreich
3. The Sonic Color Line Belts the World: Constructing Race and Music in Central Europe
Part II: 1918–1945
4. Blackness and Classical Music in the Age of the Black Horror on the Rhine Campaign
5. Singing Lieder, Hearing Race: Debating Blackness, Whiteness, and German Music in Interwar Central Europe
6. “A Negro Who Sings German Lieder Jeopardizes German Culture”: Black Musicians under the Shadow of Nazism
Part III: 1945–1961
7. “And I Thought They Were a Decadent Race”: Denazification, the Cold War, and (African) American Involvement in Postwar West German Musical Life
8. Breaking with the Past: Race, Gender, and Opera after 1945
9. Singing in the Promised Land: Black Musicians in the German Democratic Republic
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
About This Text
Annotate
Close
Next Chapter
Singing Like Germans
Next