2022: Celia Applegate, “Music and Work 03, Music at Work: Singing and Self-Organization in the Workplace”

Celia Applegate, “Music and Work 03, Music at Work: Singing and Self-Organization in the Workplace”
Wednesday, 7 December 2022, 16:00 IDT
Maiersdorf Faculty Club and Conference Center
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Mount Scopus
Jerusalem 9190501
ISRAEL

Chaired by Ofer Ashkenazi

Sponsored by:
George L. Mosse Program in History
Hebrew University Department of History
Koebner-Minerva Center for German History

Lecture Overview: Long before there was Muzak and AirPods, workers would often sing as they worked. This lecture will spread out from fields and factories and army barracks to the organized activities of workers in factory bands and workers’ festivals, and of soldiers at war. This was music not for listening but for playing and singing, accompanying work and after work. Rather than professional musicians, this lecture will focus on amateurs and their self-organization.

Celia Applegate studies the culture, society, and politics of modern Germany, with particular interest in the history of music, nationalism, and national identity. She is the author of A Nation of Provincials: The German Idea of Heimat (Berkeley, 1990), the co-editor (with musicologist Pamela Potter) of Music and German National Identity (Chicago, 2000), the author of Bach in Berlin: Nation and Culture in Mendelssohn’s Revival of the St. Matthew Passion (Cornell, 2005), winner of the DAAD/GSA Book Prize, and of The Necessity of Music: Variations on a German Theme (Toronto, 2017). She is currently working on comprehensive interpretation of musical life in Germany from the seventeenth century to the present, titled “Music and the Germans: A History.” She is Past President of the German Studies Association, Past President of the Central European History Society, and incoming chair of the AHA’s Modern European section. Professor Applegate teaches courses on modern European politics, society, and culture; the history of the Holocaust; and the history of European nationalism and ethnic conflicts.

This series of Jerusalem Mosse Lectures was originally scheduled for December 2020 but was postponed two years due to the COVID-19 global pandemic.