Modernism at the Barricades

Modernism at the Barricades
Author: Stephen Eric Bronner
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 213
Release: 2012-07-10
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0231530889

Stephen Eric Bronner revisits the modernist project's groundbreaking innovations, itsexperimental imagination, and its utopian politics. Reading the artistic and intellectual achievements of the movement's leading figures against larger social, political, and cultural trends, he follows the rise of a flawed yet salient effort at liberation and its confrontation with modernity. Modernism at the Barricades features chapters on expressionism, futurism, surrealism, and revolutionary art and includes fresh perspectives on the work of Arnold Schoenberg, Wassily Kandinsky, and Emil Nolde, among others. The volume illuminates an international avant garde intent on resisting bureaucracy, standardization, scientific rationality, and the increasing commodification of mass culture. Modernists sought new ways of feeling, new forms of expression, and new possibilities of experience while seeking to refashion society. Liberation was their aim, along with the invigoration of daily life—yet their process entangled political resistance with the cultural. Exploring both the political responsibility of the artist and the manipulation of authorial intention, Bronner reconfigures the modernist movement for contemporary progressive purposes and offers insight into the problems still complicating cultural politics. He ultimately reasserts the political dimension of developments often understood in purely aesthetic terms and confronts the self-indulgence and political irresponsibility of certain so-called modernists today. The result is a long overdue reinterpretation and rehabilitation of the modernist legacy for a new age.

The Pleasure of Modernist Music

The Pleasure of Modernist Music
Author: Arved Ashby
Publisher:
Total Pages: 404
Release: 2010
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781580463751

An exploration of the meaning and reception of "modernist" music.

Aesthetic Technologies of Modernity, Subjectivity, and Nature

Aesthetic Technologies of Modernity, Subjectivity, and Nature
Author: Richard Leppert
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 369
Release: 2015-10-06
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0520962524

Virginia Woolf famously claimed that, around December 1910, human character changed. Aesthetic Technologies addresses how music (especially opera), the phonograph, and film served as cultural agents facilitating the many extraordinary social, artistic, and cultural shifts that characterized the new century and much of what followed long thereafter, even to the present. Three tropes are central: the tensions and traumas—cultural, social, and personal—associated with modernity; changes in human subjectivity and its engagement and representation in music and film; and the more general societal impact of modern media, sound recording (the development of the phonograph in particular), and the critical role played by early-century opera recording. A principal focus of the book is the conflicted relationship in Western modernity to nature, particularly as nature is perceived in opposition to culture and articulated through music, film, and sound as agents of fundamental, sometimes shocking transformation. The book considers the sound/vision world of modernity filtered through the lens of aesthetic modernism and rapid technological change, and the impact of both, experienced with the prescient sense that there could be no turning back.

Literary Modernism and Musical Aesthetics

Literary Modernism and Musical Aesthetics
Author: Brad Bucknell
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2001
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780521660280

Bucknell's study investigates how music, as a discrete artistic mode of expression and a recurring theme in the work of these four writers, reveals the intricate and varied nature of the modernist project."--Jacket.

Modernism, Music and the Politics of Aesthetics

Modernism, Music and the Politics of Aesthetics
Author: Gemma Moss
Publisher: EUP
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2021-05-30
Genre:
ISBN: 9781474429900

Using an approach to music informed by T. W. Adorno, this book examines the real-world, political significance of seemingly abstracted things like musical and literary forms. Re-assessing music in James Joyce, Ezra Pound and Sylvia Townsend Warner, this book re-shapes temporal, aesthetic and political understandings of modernism, by arguing that music plays a crucial role in ongoing attempts to investigate language, rational thought and ideology using aesthetic forms.

Rousseau Among the Moderns

Rousseau Among the Moderns
Author: Julia Simon
Publisher: Penn State University Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2013
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9780271059587

Reevaluates Jean-Jacques Rousseau through the lens of music theory to question his contribution to thinking about music as an aesthetic force in social life. Links Rousseau's understanding of concepts in music to the problem of the individual's relationship to the social order.

Broken Beauty

Broken Beauty
Author: Joseph N. Straus
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2018-05-01
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0190871229

Preeminent music theorist and leader in the study of music and disability Joseph Straus presents a truly groundbreaking take on musical modernism--demonstrating in an expansive and vivid multimedia presentation that modernist music is inextricably entwined with attitudes toward disability. In Broken Beauty, Straus argues that the most characteristic features of musical modernism--fractured forms, immobilized harmonies, conflicting textural layers, radical simplification of means in some cases, and radical complexity and hermeticism in others--can be understood as musical depictions of disability conditions, including deformity/disfigurement, mobility impairment, madness, idiocy, and autism. Against the traditional medical model of disability, which sees it as a bodily defect requiring diagnosis and normalization or cure, this new sociocultural model of disability sees it as cultural artifact, something that is created by and creates culture. Straus places this revised model of disability against a wide range of canonical, high-art concert music from the first decades of the century through the 1950s. Broken Beauty illustrates how disability is right at the core of musical modernism; it is one of the things that musical modernism is fundamentally about.

The Aesthetics of Modernism

The Aesthetics of Modernism
Author: Ciarán Crilly
Publisher: LAP Lambert Academic Publishing
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2011-10
Genre:
ISBN: 9783845428604

The (Syn)Aesthetics of Modernism is an examination of interactions between music and the visual arts in the first quarter of the twentieth century. It aims to demonstrate how a synaesthetic view of the arts might countenance a fresh historical model and a more inclusive definition of musical modernism. The interdisciplinary relationships considered inspire a fundamental reassessment of the progression of European art music in the early 1900s. An appraisal of the manifold understandings of "modernism" precedes two substantial case studies. Schoenberg and Satie have been chosen for the contrast and positive comparisons they bring to the topic: Schoenberg is a composer whose place in the pantheon of musical modernism is assured, while Satie's situation differs due to the lesser nature of his reputation and a radically different musical style. This study ultimately proposes a revised assessment and definition of modernism from an interdisciplinary perspective. The case studies reveal how the net result of the convergence of music and the visual arts was to be a divergence towards autonomy on the one hand and music at the service of art on the other.

Transformations of Musical Modernism

Transformations of Musical Modernism
Author: Erling E. Guldbrandsen
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 369
Release: 2015-10-26
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1107127211

This collection brings fresh perspectives to bear upon key questions surrounding the composition, performance and reception of musical modernism.

The Aesthetics of Survival

The Aesthetics of Survival
Author: George Rochberg
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 283
Release: 2010-03-25
Genre: Music
ISBN: 0472025112

A revised paperback edition of composer George Rochberg's landmark essays "Rochberg presents the rare spectacle of a composer who has made his peace with tradition while maintaining a strikingly individual profile. . . . [H]e succeeds in transforming the sublime concepts of traditional music into contemporary language." ---Washington Post "An indispensable book for anyone who wishes to understand the sad and curious fate of music in the twentieth century." ---Atlantic Monthly "The writings of George Rochberg stand as a pinnacle from which our past and future can be viewed." ---Kansas City Star As a composer, George Rochberg has played a leading role in bringing about a transformation of contemporary music through a reassessment of its relation to tonality, melody, and harmony. In The Aesthetics of Survival, the author addresses the legacy of modernism in music and its related effect on the cultural milieu, particularly its overemphasis on the abstract, rationalist thinking embraced by contemporary science, technology, and philosophy. Rochberg argues for the renewal of holistic values in order to ensure the survival of music as a humanly expressive art. A renowned composer, thinker, and teacher, George Rochberg has been honored with innumerable awards, including, most recently, an Alfred I. du Pont Award for Outstanding Conductors and Composers, and an André and Clara Mertens Contemporary Composer Award. He lives in Pennsylvania.