Sep

19 2024

Gilya Schmidt Book Reading at Union Avenue Book

6:00PM - 7:00PM  

Contact Helene Sinnreich
Hsinnrei@utk.edu
http://judaic.utk.edu

GILYA GERDA SCHMIDT, professor emerita of Religious Studies and director emerita of the Fern and Manfred Steinfeld Program in Judaic Studies, will present her new book Hazzan Mordecai Gustav Heiser: An Artist, His Art, and the Cantor Tradition in America at Union Books. This event will take place on Thursday, September 19th at 6pm at Union Ave. Books in Downtown Knoxville. Dr. Schmidt will present two recordings of Cantor Heiser's music, along with a short reading from the book. She will also be signing books for attendees.

About the Book

When Gilya Gerda Schmidt met him in 1986, Cantor Heiser had spent forty-six of his eighty-one years as a US citizen and was well-acquainted with mourning. Heiser had assumed the cantorate at Congregation B’nai Israel in the East End of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1942. A master of the cantor’s art, he was renowned for his style, elegant choir and service arrangements, and rich, dolesome voice, which seemed to pass effortlessly into hearers’ hearts.

But this book is more than a memorial to Heiser. Schmidt melds decades of archival research, conservation efforts, family interviews, and trips to Jerusalem and Berlin into a critical reconstruction of the life and vision of Hazzan Mordecai Gustav Heiser in the multiple contexts that shaped him. Coming of age in Berlin in the afterglow of the Second German Empire meant that young Gustav had tasted European Jewish culture in a rare state of refinement and modernity. But by January 30, 1940, when he reached New York with his wife, Elly, and two-and-a-half-year-old daughter, Judith, Cantor Heiser had lost nearly all of his living family relations to the extermination programs of the German Reich, after narrowly surviving a brief incarceration at Sachsenhausen.

While Cantor Heiser’s art was steeped in nineteenth-century tradition, Schmidt contends that Heiser’s music was a powerful affirmation of Jewish life in the twentieth century. In a final chapter, Schmidt describes his influence on the American cantorate and American culture and society.

https://calendar.utk.edu/event/an-author-event-with-dr-gilya-gerda-schmidt?utm_campaign=widget&utm_medium=widget&utm_source=University+of+Tennessee%2C+Knoxville

Sponsor: Union Avenue Books, Fern and Manfred Steinfeld Program in Judaic Studies, University of Tennessee Press