
After zero hour: States as “custodians of universal human culture,” or “guardians of advanced art”
Author(s) -
Melita Milin
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
muzikologija
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2406-0976
pISSN - 1450-9814
DOI - 10.2298/muz1723041m
Subject(s) - custodians , modernism (music) , ideology , communism , german , western culture , classical music , realism , aesthetics , history , art , literature , political science , law , musical , archaeology , politics
The emergence of radically new, avant-garde movements in German music and throughout Western Europe after WW2 has often been seen as expressing a strivings to create on a tabula rasa, in order to create distance from the horrors of the recent past. In the countries of the communist bloc, the imposed ideology of socialist realism also created a sharp break, similar to that in the West, except that Zero Hour was conceived in quite a different fashion, as a move in the opposite direction from Western modernism. The case of post-war music in Yugoslavia is examined under the light of the fact that the country did not belong to either bloc.