Music theory in the age of Romanticism

Author(s)

    • Bent, Ian

Bibliographic Information

Music theory in the age of Romanticism

edited by Ian Bent

Cambridge University Press, 2005, c1996

  • : paperback

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

"First published 1996, this digitally printed first paperback version 2005"--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Twelve authors probe the mind of the Romantic era in its thinking about music. They provide a searching examination of writings by music theorists, critics, aestheticians, philosophers, and commentators from 1800 to 1875. In doing so, they wield new critical tools as well as old, casting fresh light, for example, on familiar problems of musical form by inspecting eighteenth-century rhetoric and nineteenth-century gendered discourse; exploring Schubertian modulation and Wagnerian motif with the insights of cognitive science; reinterpreting pianistic finger exercise by way of Michel Foucault and Frankenstein and so on. The impact of Hegel and Schelling on music theory occupies an important place, as does Schleiermacher's hermeneutics on analysis and criticism. The brilliant group of young historians of theory, represented here, provides an array of approaches, from detailed music analysis, through close reading of texts, through critical discourse, to philosophical enquiry.

Table of Contents

  • Part I. Cultural and Philosophical Frameworks: 1. The mechanics of sensation and the construction of the Romantic musical experience Leslie David Blasius
  • 2. F. W. J. Schelling's Philosophie der Kunst: an emergent semiology of music Ian Biddle
  • 3. Fetis and emerging tonal consciousness Thomas Christenden
  • 4. Romantic music under siege in 1848 Sanna Pederson
  • Part II. Hermeneutics, Analysis, Criticism: 5. Second immediacies in the Eroica Brian Hyer
  • 6. Plato - Beethoven: a hermeneutics for nineteenth-century music? Ian Bent
  • 7. Intersubjectivity and analysis: Schumann's essay on the Fantastic Symphony Fred Everett Maus
  • Part III. Rhetoric, Metaphor, Musical Perception: 8. The concept of developpement in the early nineteenth century Peter A. Hoyt
  • 9. A. B. Marx and the gendering of sonata form Scott Burnham
  • 10. ... wie ein rother Faden: on the origins of 'Leitmotif' as critical construct and musical practice Thomas Grey
  • 11. Musical invariance as a cognitive structure: 'multiple meaning' in the early nineteenth century Janna K. Saslaw and James P. Walsh
  • Index.

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