At the beginning of the nineteenth century, a fundamental change in the Western world-view began: The dynastic worldview prevailing since the sixteenth century, explaining social order, chronology, and geography with reference to genealogy, was challenged by new nationalist ideas (Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities). This process lasted most of the century and was characterized by a struggle for interpretive precedence. How should the ideas that constitute the worldview be understood? What weight should they have? Here, different social strata stood against each other, since the nationalist worldview included ideas of equality, democracy, and, by extension, a shift of power. One way to address this was precisely by reinterpreting the meaning of the novel ideas and making them compatible with the prevailing social order. Particularly important for this interpretive work was the cultural life, where the worldview was primarily shaped. Here, music played an important role, particularly since its significance for wider social groups increased markedly during the period.
Part of a larger project ranging throughout the nineteenth century, this paper fo-cuses on the Swedish Royal Opera in the first half of the century. Taking leads from James H. Johnson (Listening in Paris, 1995) and Michael Walter (“Die Oper ist ein Irren-haus,” 1997) I show how this institution and its associated affective practices contributed to the interpretations of the nationalist ideas. Fundamentally propagandistic, the institution itself contributes to the understanding. The occurrence and use of nationalist ideas in this arena fit their meaning to the dynastic worldview. In the paper, music is studied as an affective practice, acknowledging how the practice gives music affective value. To a large extent, it is in practice that music conveys new ideas. The practice determines the meaning, to a greater degree even than the music itself.
2022.
21st Quinquennial Congress of the International Musicological Society (IMS2022), Athen, Greece, August 22 -26, 2022