Anxieties over Technology in Yugoslav Interwar Music Criticism: Stanislav Vinaver in Dialogue with Walter Benjamin
Abstract
The text sheds light on a previously little known piece written in 1935 by the Jewish-Serbian poet and literary and music critic Stanislav Vinaver, from the perspective of the much more famous ‘artwork essay’ by Walter Benjamin, likewise from 1935, as well as some of Vinaver’s many writings on music. The purpose is to offer an interpretation of Vinaver’s views on the mechanical reproduction of music, seemingly close to Benjamin’s views on technological reproducibility in the visual arts and its effects but ultimately drawing very different conclusions. The reasons for this may be found in Vinaver’s passionate advocacy of modernism in Yugoslav literature and music alike and a sort of nostalgic, metaphysical reverence for music, reminiscent of its apotheosis in early German Romanticism.