Reviews
"Lisa Jakelski’s Making New Music in Cold War Poland is an important contribution to international and transnational history... Logically organized and lucidly written."—H-Diplo
“Jakelski’s writing, based always on a detailed analysis of source materials, is both fully convincing and deeply engaging for the reader…. Her book can be highly recommended to anyone interested in the history of the Warsaw Autumn and in how the musical festival could be used as a means of cultural diplomacy in the Cold War world.”—European History Quarterly
"[Jakelski's] book is an important item, a kind of double take 'from the outside'. Firstly from a non-Polish perspective, secondly from a non-ideological perspective. The conceptual shape of today’s Warsaw Autumn is most interesting when viewed in this light."—The Polish Journal of the Arts and Culture
"Jakelski’s book is superbly researched and beautifully written. . . . this is a powerful work on cultural diplomacy, postwar Poland, and the complexities of state socialism. It is a must-read for anyone interested in the “soft power” of cultural exchange across the Cold War divide and its implications for both East and West."—H-Poland
"Jakelski’s book is superbly researched and beautifully written. . . . This is a powerful work on cultural diplomacy, postwar Poland, and the complexities of state socialism. It is a must-read for anyone interested in the “soft power” of cultural exchange across the Cold War divide and its implications for both East and West."—H-Net
“Lisa Jakelski’s Making New Music in Cold War Poland offers a vibrant account of the postwar negotiations on what new music could and should mean, positioned on what Jakelski terms ‘the Cold War's cultural fault line,’ at a site of concrete, critical engagement between modernism and socialist realism. Jakelski’s narrative, though, does away with simplistic binaries, revealing the ways in which the everyday lives and interactions between composers, performers, administrators, and critics negotiated the space between the competing poles. In equal measure political and personal, this account expands both the geographical and the methodological territory of histories of new music in important, vital directions.”—Martin Iddon, author of New Music at Darmstadt: Nono, Stockhausen, Cage, and Boulez
“No mere institutional history here! Jakelski’s book crackles with insights into Cold War cultural politics, festival culture, and the practices and practitioners of new music in the long 1960s. Highly recommended for its grounding in extraordinary archival research and interviews, its conceptual verve, and its elegant prose.”—Joy H. Calico, author of Arnold Schoenberg’s “A Survivor from Warsaw in Postwar Europe”
“Jakelski's engaging, impeccably researched study captures a heady environment of musical upheaval, innovation, and controversy whose ramifications are still being felt today. This will be a crucial resource for anyone interested in postwar music making, the arts during the Cold War, and music’s many social meanings.”—Peter J. Schmelz, author of Such Freedom if Only Musical: Unofficial Soviet Music during the Thaw
"This outstanding book is a must-read for anyone who seeks to understand twentieth-century art music. Through painstaking primary source research, Lisa Jakelski shows us how Polish composers worked with, through, against and alongside the power of the state to achieve their desired ends. At the same time, this nuanced, clear-eyed history demonstrates definitively that Polish artists were not cut off from the world, but deeply engaged in musical activity across and through the Iron Curtain. By revealing the national and international networks in which new music was made, Jakelski transforms our understanding of Europe’s Cold War musical life."—Danielle Fosler-Lussier, author of Music in America’s Cold War Diplomacy
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