The Exile's Song: Edmond Dédé and the Unfinished Revolutions of the Atlantic World
Sally McKee
(Author)
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Description
The extraordinary story of African American composer Edmond Dédé, raised in antebellum New Orleans, and his remarkable career in France In 1855, Edmond Dédé, a free black composer from New Orleans, emigrated to Paris. There he trained with France's best classical musicians and went on to spend thirty-six years in Bordeaux leading the city's most popular orchestras. How did this African American, raised in the biggest slave market in the United States, come to compose ballets for one of the best theaters outside of Paris and gain recognition as one of Bordeaux's most popular orchestra leaders? Beginning with his birth in antebellum New Orleans in 1827 and ending with his death in Paris in 1901, Sally McKee vividly recounts the life of this extraordinary man. From the Crescent City to the City of Light and on to the raucous music halls of Bordeaux, this intimate narrative history brings to life the lost world of exiles and travelers in a rapidly modernizing world that threatened to leave the most vulnerable behind.
Product Details
Price
$80.40
Publisher
Yale University Press
Publish Date
January 03, 2017
Pages
272
Dimensions
6.4 X 9.3 X 0.9 inches | 1.1 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780300221367
BISAC Categories:
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Sally McKee teaches history at the University of California, Davis. Her research has included Venice's Mediterranean colonies and domestic slavery in the households of late medieval Italy. Her focus on the sexual, familial, and coercive relationships between enslaved women and the free men around them in those earlier centuries stimulated her new work on race and cultural movements in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.