Musicology Without Music

In Nick Braae & Kai Arne Hansen (eds.), On Popular Music and its Unruly Entanglements. Springer Verlag (2019)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

The phrase “musicology without music” is not a call to abandon music or musicology. Rather, it is a call to expand and multiply those domains by highlighting the ways that they are not only inseparable from but also constituted by a variety of distributed and ostensibly non-musical conditions. The word “without,” then, connotes less its everyday prepositional meaning as lack than its archaic adverbial meaning as outside—although, as I show in this chapter, the latter authorizes the former. The point is to develop a mediatic version of music research that does not begin as a musicology of music—that does not begin in a tautology whereby the force of pre-constructed definitions of either music or musicology delimit what music or musicology can be or should do. I illustrate the epistemological and political benefits of this perspective by attending to the key materials that constitute the distinctive thin sizzle of the 78-rpm disc as a format.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 91,881

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Music & meaning.Jenefer Robinson (ed.) - 1997 - Ithaca [N.Y.]: Cornell University Press.
Lisa McCormick. Music as Social Performance. [REVIEW]Mariya Polikashina - 2010 - Russian Sociological Review 9 (2):106-111.
Music, Politics, and the Academy.Pieter C. Van den Toorn - 1995 - University of California Press.

Analytics

Added to PP
2020-02-07

Downloads
7 (#1,387,247)

6 months
1 (#1,471,540)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Citations of this work

No citations found.

Add more citations

References found in this work

No references found.

Add more references