Javaphilia: American Love Affairs with Javanese Music and Dance

Javaphilia: American Love Affairs with Javanese Music and Dance

Javaphilia: American Love Affairs with Javanese Music and Dance

Javaphilia: American Love Affairs with Javanese Music and Dance

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Overview

Fragrant tropical flowers, opulent batik fabrics, magnificent bronze gamelan orchestras, and, of course, aromatic coffee. Such are the exotic images of Java, Indonesia's most densely populated island, that have hovered at the periphery of North American imaginations for generations. Through close readings of the careers of four "javaphiles"—individuals who embraced Javanese performing arts in their own quests for a sense of belonging—Javaphilia: American Love Affairs with Javanese Music and Dance explores a century of American representations of Javanese performing arts by North Americans. While other Asian cultures made direct impressions on Americans by virtue of firsthand contacts through immigration, trade, and war, the distance between Java and America, and the vagueness of Americans' imagery, enabled a few disenfranchised musicians and dancers to fashion alternative identities through bold and idiosyncratic representations of Javanese music and dance.

Javaphilia's main subjects—Canadian-born singer Eva Gauthier (1885–1958), dancer/painter Hubert Stowitts (1892–1953), ethnomusicologist Mantle Hood (1918–2005), and composer Lou Harrison (1917–2003)—all felt marginalized by the mainstream of Western society: Gauthier by her lukewarm reception as an operatic mezzo-soprano in Europe, Stowitts by his homosexuality, Hood by conflicting interests in spirituality and scientific method, and Harrison by his predilection for prettiness in a musical milieu that valued more anxious expressions. All four parlayed their own direct experiences of Java into a defining essence for their own characters. By identifying aspects of Javanese music and dance that were compatible with their own tendencies, these individuals could literally perform unconventional—yet coherent—identities based in Javanese music and dance. Although they purported to represent Java to their fellow North Americans, they were in fact simply representing themselves.

In addition to probing the fascinating details of these javaphiles' lives, Javaphilia presents a novel analysis of North America's first significant encounters with Javanese performing arts at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. An account of the First International Gamelan Festival, in Vancouver, BC (at Expo 86), almost a century later, bookends the epoch that is the focus of Javaphilia and sets the stage for a meditation on North Americans' ongoing relationships with the music and dance of Java.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780824840945
Publisher: University of Hawaii Press, The
Publication date: 03/31/2015
Series: Music and Performing Arts of Asia and the Pacific
Pages: 296
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Frederick Lau is the chair and professor of ethnomusicology and director of the Center for Chinese Studies at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa.

Table of Contents

Preface vii

Chapter 1 A Tale of Two Expos 1

Chapter 2 Roots of American "Javas": The 1893 World's Columbian Exposition 26

Chapter 3 Java to Jazz: Eva Gauthier 56

Chapter 4 "To Make Ourselves Complete": Stowitts 88

Chapter 5 Man(tle Hood), the Unknown 124

Chapter 6 More Western than It Sounds: Lou Harrison 152

Chapter 7 Javaphilia, Then and Now 183

Appendix I The Tuning of the 1893 Gamelan 201

Appendix II Javanese Kraton, Names, and Titles 205

Notes 209

References 231

Index 257

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