The Self and the Wolf: An Examination of R. Murray Schafer's Wolf Project

Throughout Canada's independent history composers, visual artists, musicians, and writers have attempted to navigate the country's connection with its vast wilderness. One artist who explores this relationship to its fullest extent is Canadian composer and educator R. Murray Schafer. Schaf...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Scheffer, Erin (author), Von Glahn, Denise (professor directing thesis), Outka, Paul (committee member), Gunderson, Frank D. (committee member), College of Music (degree granting department), Florida State University (degree granting institution)
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Florida State University 2010
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Online Access:https://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A774451/datastream/TN/view/The%20Self%20and%20the%20Wolf.jpg
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Summary:Throughout Canada's independent history composers, visual artists, musicians, and writers have attempted to navigate the country's connection with its vast wilderness. One artist who explores this relationship to its fullest extent is Canadian composer and educator R. Murray Schafer. Schafer's Patria Cycle, a body of eleven works, explores themes from the romanticized wilderness such as the noble savage and the link between the wild and sublime. The epilogue to Schafer's Patria Cycle, “…And the Wolf Shall Inherit the Moon” is a multi-day community living experience and artistic collaboration, with approximately sixty members, which takes place in Northern Ontario each summer. In this work, (referred to as the Wolf Project by its participants) Schafer and a group of musicians, artists, actors, and wilderness-lovers work together to mount various dramatic productions bringing the Patria Cycle to a close. All the while, these artists employ a large amount of musical borrowing from Canadian First Nations cultures. While this borrowing on may seem innocuous to some and offensive and appropriative to others, the use of First Nations musical, spiritual, and cultural tropes and their subsequent romanticization by Caucasian artists has been prevalent in the environmental, New Age, and artistic movements which have helped define Canada‟s twentieth and twenty-first century wilderness identity. A Thesis submitted to the College of Music in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. Summer Semester, 2010. April 7, 2010. Canada, romanticized wilderness, First Nations, wilderness identity Includes bibliographical references. Denise Von Glahn, Professor Directing Thesis; Paul Outka, Committee Member; Frank Gunderson, Committee Member