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Peculiar Attunements: How Affect Theory Turned Musical Paperback - 2020
by Grant, Roger Mathew
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Details
- Title Peculiar Attunements: How Affect Theory Turned Musical
- Author Grant, Roger Mathew
- Binding Paperback
- Condition New
- Pages 192
- Volumes 1
- Language ENG
- Publisher FORDHAM UNIV PR
- Date 2020-03-03
- Illustrated Yes
- Features Bibliography, Illustrated, Index
- Bookseller's Inventory # ING9780823287741
- ISBN 9780823287741 / 0823287742
- Weight 0.59 lbs (0.27 kg)
- Dimensions 9 x 6 x 0.41 in (22.86 x 15.24 x 1.04 cm)
- Library of Congress subjects Europe, Music - Philosophy and aesthetics
- Library of Congress Catalog Number 2019955796
- Dewey Decimal Code 781.17
From the rear cover
"Affect theorists and musicologists have been waiting for a book like this for a very long time, and we are lucky to get it from a thinker as clear-sighted as Grant. With its unparalleled lucidity, and lively, nimble prose, Peculiar Attunements promises to be an instant classic in the study of affect and emotion."--Sianne Ngai, University of Chicago
"Why is contemporary affect theory suffused with words like resonance, reverberation, tuning, vibration--language that conjures up music? Roger Grant, in posing that question, mounts a formidable and extraordinarily clear-headed critique of affect theory, while at the same time identifying and then demystifying its strange affinities with eighteenth-century theories about music's power. This rich theoretical harvest becomes the framework for Grant's novel take on mimesis and meaning in eighteenth-century instrumental music and opera, in a book that reimagines this repertory in ways that are subtle, surprising, revelatory--a tour-de-force."--Carolyn Abbate, Harvard University Peculiar Attunements places the recent turn to affect into conversation with a parallel movement in European music theory of the eighteenth century. During that time the affects formed a vital component of a mimetic model of the arts. Eighteenth-century critics held that artworks imitated or copied the natural world in order to produce copies of the affects in their beholders. But music caused a problem for such theories, since--apart from the rare thunderclap or birdcall--it wasn't apparent that musical tones could imitate anything with any dependability. As a result, eighteenth-century thinkers postulated that music's physical materiality as sound vibrated the nerves of listeners and attuned them to the affects through sympathetic resonance. This theory is a pendant to our contemporary theories of affect, and one from which they have much to learn. Inflecting our current intellectual moment through eighteenth-century music theory and aesthetics, Grant offers a reassessment of affect theory's common systems and processes. Roger Mathew Grant is Associate Professor of Music at Wesleyan University. He is the author of Beating Time and Measuring Music in the Early Modern Era (Oxford), which won the 2016 Society for Music Theory Emerging Scholar Award.Media reviews
Citations
- Choice, 10/01/2020, Page 0