Concert: “Freedom II – Do You Hear the People Sing?”

FROM WILL TO FREEDOM – CHINA IN A GLOBAL CONTEXT: A CONTRIBUTION TO THE "FREEDOM" YEAR OF SCIENCE

Concert featuring new compositions by Wang Ying and Zhao Yiran

Organizers:KlangForum(external link), Confucius Institute(external link) at Heidelberg University & Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities State Academy of Baden-Württemberg) 

November 23 and 24, 2024


The concert is being held as part of the “Freedom” Science Year, sponsored by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research, and as part of the “PERSPEKTIVE: FREIHEIT” series organized by the Union of German Academies of Sciences and Humanities. The Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and Humanities State Academy of Baden-Württemberg), in collaboration with member Prof. Dr. Barbara Mittler, is organizing a series of events under the title “From the Will to Freedom – China in a Global Context.” The concert is a collaboration between the Klangforum Heidelberg, Heidelberg University, the Confucius Institute based there, and the Heidelberg Academy.

The two composers, Ying WANG and Yiran ZHAO, explore what freedom actually means in China following the “liberation” by the Communist Party. Ying WANG draws inspiration from the ballet *The White-Haired Girl* ("Baimao nü" 白毛女), which gained particular popularity during the Cultural Revolution as a so-called “model play” (yangbanxi 样板戏), and thus as prescribed (and the only officially permitted) propaganda music—in other words, from an outside perspective, not at all free. The eponymous heroine of the model play, however, is liberated twice in the story: She flees from an abusive landowner and hides in a temple, where she subsists on the offerings of the villagers, who regard her as a ghost because her hair has turned white due to malnutrition. The People’s Liberation Army rescues her from the constraints of “feudal society” and its superstitions, restoring her to a life as a human being (no longer a spirit). In WANG’s reimagining, she is now paired with another well-known “white-haired girl”: Elsa, whom Walt Disney Pictures successfully marketed worldwide in 2013 with the film “Frozen.” “Frozen” tells the story of the awakening of the main character Elsa’s previously hidden talent to freeze objects and people into ice. Shaken by her uncontrollable—and freedom-depriving—powers, Elsa, as the white-haired ice queen, goes into self-imposed exile. In Interview with the White-Haired Girl (world premiere), the title heroines of the two “propaganda pieces” meet and critically question their respective understandings of freedom.

Yiran ZHAO’s commissioned composition evokes another questionable moment of liberation—a call for “free speech” from China’s recent past that quickly turned into its opposite: In 1956, Mao Zedong launched the so-called “Hundred Flowers Campaign,” which, under the slogan “Let a hundred flowers bloom, let a hundred schools of thought contend” (bai hua qifang, bai jia zhengming 百花齊放,百家爭鳴 / 百花齐放,百家争鸣), a contest of ideas that also called for criticism of the prevailing conditions. When Mao’s government realized during the course of the experiment just how fierce this criticism would become, the movement and the solicitation of criticism “from below” were abruptly halted: the Anti-Rightist Campaign not only condemned those who had spoken out critically; countless people (including Wang Xilin) were punished, sent to the countryside, or banished to labor camps.

Barbara Mittler

Notes:

In the current Athene Magazine (internal link), which was published in June on the topic of "Freedom," there is a detailed article on the exhibition as well as on the other events organized by the Academy as part of the Year of Science. 

"From the Will to Freedom – China in a Global Context"Educational Program of the China School Academy (PDF)(internal link)

TheScience Years (external link) are an initiative ofthe Federal Ministry of Education and Research(external link) in collaboration withWissenschaft im Dialog(external link). TheUnion of German Academies of Sciences and Humanities (external link) and its member academies regularly participate in the Science Years through various engagement formats.

Further information:

Date: November 23 and 24, 2024

Location: HebelHalle Heidelberg, Hebelstraße 9, 69115 Heidelberg

Start: November 23 at 7:00 p.m. and November 24, 2024, at 5:00 p.m.