The Sound of Hope: Music as Solace, Resistance and Salvation During the Holocaust and World War II is a 2020 book about music in the Holocaust. It was written by Kellie Brown, Professor of Music at Milligan University and released by McFarland Publishing.[1][2]
Description
The Sound of Hope is the result of 20 years of research into music's role during the Holocaust and World War II.[3] The book’s premise is that music has an innate ability to speak to and through people in times of great stress and suffering.[4] The book examines places around the world during the 1930s and ‘40s where this suffering happened (Auschwitz, Dachau, Bergen-Belsen, Terezín, the Warsaw Ghetto, Stalag 8A, Sumatra, Leningrad) and presents the stories of musicians who stubbornly clung to music as hope and spiritual resistance.[5] The book also notes that music was not a universal salve, but that music in the hands of the Nazis was used as a cog in their machinery of genocide.[2] and that for some musicians the gift of music was forever stolen from them.
According to The Washington Post, "Brown shows how for persecuted and imprisoned Jews, music became a way to preserve their humanity and at times even their lives... Brown has succeeded admirably in bringing together in one volume so much important research".[9] The book is the winner of one of the prestigious Choice Outstanding Academic Title designation for 2021.[10]
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction: The Power of Music
The Rise of the Third Reich and Its Cultural Agenda