TY - CHAP
T1 - Literature
AU - Ingleby, Matthew
AU - Owen, Ceri
PY - 2024/4
Y1 - 2024/4
N2 - Drawing upon their respective expertise in early twentieth-century literature and music, Matthew Ingleby and Ceri Owen explore the centrality of literature within Vaughan Williams’s work and career, demonstrating that his literariness was not simply an outgrowth of his personal artistic proclivities, but rather was mediated by several institutions that were key to the production of a new sense of English national identity during the first half of the twentieth century. By contextualizing Vaughan Williams’s literary tastes and choices for musical settings – including his interest in historically remote, non-contemporary, and Anglophone writers and texts – it is argued that such choices should be read less as evidence of the reactionary, conservative nationalism with which he has often been associated, and more as an indication of his participation in forward-looking currents within twentieth-century literary culture. Ingleby and Owen conclude by proposing that, while the nation may have been the frame through which Vaughan Williams often articulated a complex relation to modernity, his powerful interest in internationalist figures such as Walt Whitman and William Blake suggest that his cultural nationalism formed part of a broader humanitarian aspiration, one that was implicitly indebted to his literary imagination.
AB - Drawing upon their respective expertise in early twentieth-century literature and music, Matthew Ingleby and Ceri Owen explore the centrality of literature within Vaughan Williams’s work and career, demonstrating that his literariness was not simply an outgrowth of his personal artistic proclivities, but rather was mediated by several institutions that were key to the production of a new sense of English national identity during the first half of the twentieth century. By contextualizing Vaughan Williams’s literary tastes and choices for musical settings – including his interest in historically remote, non-contemporary, and Anglophone writers and texts – it is argued that such choices should be read less as evidence of the reactionary, conservative nationalism with which he has often been associated, and more as an indication of his participation in forward-looking currents within twentieth-century literary culture. Ingleby and Owen conclude by proposing that, while the nation may have been the frame through which Vaughan Williams often articulated a complex relation to modernity, his powerful interest in internationalist figures such as Walt Whitman and William Blake suggest that his cultural nationalism formed part of a broader humanitarian aspiration, one that was implicitly indebted to his literary imagination.
KW - Ralph Vaughan Williams
KW - music and literature
KW - modernity
KW - modernism
KW - early twentieth century
KW - English national identity
KW - literary institutions
KW - music and temporality
KW - John Skelton
KW - Walt Whitman
KW - Robert Louis Stevenson
KW - William Blake
KW - Shakespeare
KW - Bunyan
KW - The Pilgrim’s Progress
KW - Royal College of Music (RCM)
UR - https://www.cambridge.org/gb/universitypress/subjects/music/twentieth-century-and-contemporary-music/vaughan-williams-context?format=HB
UR - https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/vaughan-williams-in-context/2A318030ECF1DA9668AE4ED0FB130656
U2 - 10.1017/9781108681261.020
DO - 10.1017/9781108681261.020
M3 - Chapter (peer-reviewed)
SN - 9781108493321
T3 - Composers in Context
SP - 161
EP - 168
BT - Vaughan Williams in Context
A2 - Onderdonk, Julian
A2 - Owen, Ceri
PB - Cambridge University Press
ER -