Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Date
2021
Document Type
Dissertation
Degree Name
Doctor of Philosophy
Department
Music
Committee Chair
Kenneth Kreitner
Committee Member
Jeremy Orosz
Committee Member
Janet Page
Committee Member
Daniel Unowsky
Abstract
Alma Mahler (18791964) grew up surrounded by artists in late nineteenth-century Vienna. Despite her musical training, demonstrated passion for music, and publication of several Lieder, Mahlers identity as a composer has remained overshadowed by narratives surrounding her personal life and those of her husbands and lovers, not to mention the artistic work of her husbands and lovers. Increasingly, however, interest in Alma Mahler as a composer has been nurtured through creative engagement with that legacy, and frequently by women authors and artists. This dissertation explores the existing literature written by and related to Alma Mahler and identifies some approaches for reevaluating her legacy as a composer. Those writing about the life and legacy of Alma Mahler in the twenty-first century typically follow one of two established paths; that of the rational author writing the irrational female subject or that of creative, and frequently feminist, approaches to Mahlers life and work. I propose a third path, one that acknowledges both of the aforementioned approaches, but that focuses on Mahlers work instead of her words. By drawing attention to Mahler worksthat is, her songs and the performance thereofand considering how reception and recording of these songs has shifted over the past several decades, I am poised to assert that Mahler is a composer. The proliferation of diverging primary source materials surrounding her life and musical activities has prompted some to discount the narrative of Alma Mahler as a legitimate composer. This dissertation acknowledges the varied and often conflicting approaches to and perspectives on the idea of Alma Mahler as a composer and investigates how her music and its performance have been received in light of, and sometimes despite, her own writings. My work reconciles diverse facets of the composer by exploring her own words, the words of others, and, perhaps most importantly, her musical work in contemporary performance. It is my contention that by investigating Mahler through all of these frames, we can identify and contextualize the hidden but significant musical contributions of a young, female song composer in turn-of-the-century Vienna.
Library Comment
Dissertation or thesis originally submitted to ProQuest
Recommended Citation
Scott, Rachel Elizabeth, "Taking Her at Her Work: Reconsidering the Legacy of Alma Mahler" (2021). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 2764.
https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/etd/2764
Comments
Data is provided by the student.