Listening Awry : Music and Alterity in German Culture.
tarafından
 
Schwarz, David.

Başlık
Listening Awry : Music and Alterity in German Culture.

Yazar
Schwarz, David.

ISBN
9780816696574

Yazar Ek Girişi
Schwarz, David.

Fiziksel Tanımlama
1 online resource (240 pages)

İçerik
Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- ONE: The Rise of the Conductor and the Missing One -- TWO: Franz Schubert's "Die Stadt" and Sublime (Dis)pleasure -- THREE: Music and the Birth of Psychoanalysis: Anton Webern's Opus 6, no.4 -- FOUR: Left! Right! Left! Right! Music, Bodies, Fascism -- FIVE: Closing the Wound: Parsifal by Richard Wagner and Hans-Jürgen Syberberg -- Notes -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Z.

Özet
In his first book, Listening Subjects, David Schwarz succeeded in fusing post-Lacanian psychoanalytic, musical-theoretical, and musical-historical perspectives. In Listening Awry, he expands his project to "tell a story of historical modernism writ large"-how German music spanning two centuries refracts changes in society and culture, as well as the impacts of concepts introduced by psychoanalysis. Schwarz shows how post-Lacanian psychoanalysis can be applied to ideological interpellation that connects psychoanalysis to culture and how music theory can ground these considerations in precise details of musical textuality. He "listens awry" in several ways: by understanding musical meaning in both objective and socially structured ways, by embracing historical and also aesthetic approaches, by addressing high art as well as popular music, and by listening "around" conventional forms of musical meaning to reach toward that which evades signification. Structured around four themes-trauma, the other/Other, the look/gaze binary, and Judaism-Listening Awry explores five key moments in post-Enlightenment music: the rise of the singular orchestral conductor and the emergence of a new form of alterity, the Art Song and "the sublime of the delicate" (a correlate of the Kantian mathematical and dynamical sublime), the birth of psychoanalysis and the twentieth-century turn toward atonality, German war songs and the subversion of German music by the Nazis, and two different versions of Wagner's Parsifal that were performed one hundred years apart and in radically different contexts. This highly original work, filled with imaginative readings and disquieting observations, links trauma with the culture and history of modernity and German music, deftly tying the experience of the body to the sounds it hears: how it reaches us slowly, penetrates the skin, and
 
resonates.

Notlar
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

Konu Başlığı
Music -- Germany -- History and criticism.
 
Music -- Philosophy and aesthetics.
 
Music -- Psychological aspects.
 
Other (Philosophy).

Tür
Electronic books.

Elektronik Erişim
Click to View


LibraryMateryal TürüDemirbaş NumarasıYer NumarasıDurumu/İade Tarihi
IYTE LibraryE-Kitap1196212-1001ML3830 -- .S278 2006 EBEbrary E-Books