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Fantasies of music in nostalgic medievalism
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30 January 2024

In the period between the Second World War and the present, there has been an extraordinary rise in the production of medievalist fantasy literature and film. This has been accompanied by the revival, performance and invention of medieval music. In this enterprise modern fantasies of the Middle Ages have exercised great influence.
Fantasies of music in nostalgic medievalism shows how music, medievalism and nostalgia have been woven together in the fantasies of writers and readers, musicians, musicologists, directors and listeners, film-makers and film-goers. This book studies the ways in which three fields of creative activity inspired by the medieval – musical performance, literature, cinema and their reception – have worked together to produce and sustain, for some, the fantasy of a long-lost, long-mourned paradisal home.
An electronic version of this book will be made open access within three years of publication thanks to Path to Open, a program developed in partnership between JSTOR, the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS), University of Michigan Press, and The University of North Carolina Press.
Introduction: Music, nostalgia and the medieval
1 More real than reality: nostalgia for the medieval in high fantasy fiction
2 ‘Yearning for the sweet beckoning sound’: Musical longings and the unsayable in medievalist fantasy fiction
3 The lost world inside a song: from the book to the record
4 Exotic sexualities: the countertenor voice in the late twentieth-century medieval music revival
5 The call of the mother: music for myth and fantasy in two Arthurian films
Aftermath