Results for 'Music and mythology '

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  1.  90
    Music and pain.Andreas Dorschel - 2011 - In Jane Fulcher (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the New Cultural History of Music. Oxford University Press. pp. 68-79.
    Ancient mythology related music to pain in a twofold way. Pain is the punishment inflicted for producing inferior music: the fate of Marsyas; music is sublimation of pain: the achievement of Orpheus and of Philomela. Both aspects have played defining roles in Western musical culture. Pain’s natural expression is the scream. To be present in music at all, pain needs to be transformed. So even where music expresses pain, at the same time it appeases (...)
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  2. Myth, Music, and Science: Teaching the Philosophy of Science through the Use of Non-Scientific Examples.Edward Slowik - 2003 - Science & Education 12 (3):289-302.
    This essay explores the benefits of utilizing non-scientific examples and analogies in teaching philosophy of science courses. These examples can help resolve two basic difficulties faced by most instructors, especially when teaching lower-level courses: first, they can prompt students to take an active interest in the class material, since the examples will involve aspects of the culture well-known, or at least more interesting, to the students; and second, these familiar, less-threatening examples will lessen the students' collective anxieties and open them (...)
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  3.  4
    White musical mythologies: sonic presence in modernism.Edmund Mendelssohn - 2023 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
    Examining a series of modernist thinkers and composers who engaged with non-European cultures as they pursued pure sound as a privileged presence, White Musical Mythologies pairs Erik Satie with Bergson, Edgard Varèse with Bataille, Pierre Boulez with Artaud, and John Cage with Derrida to offer an ambitious intellectual history of the colonial roots of modernist musical thought. Each of the musicians studied in this book re-created or appropriated non-European forms of expression as they conceived music ontologically, often thinking (...) as something immediate and immersive: from Satie's dabblings with mysticism and exoticism in bohemian Montmartre of the 1890s to Varèse's experience of ethnographic exhibitions and surrealist poetry in 1930s Paris, and from Boulez's endeavor to theorize a kind of musical writing that would "absorb" the sounds of non-European musical traditions to Cage, who took inspiration from Eastern thought as he wrote about sound, silence, and chance. Edmund Mendelssohn suggests that the Euro-American idea of "pure sound," and the twentieth-century quest to produce it, was premised on an assumed authority of "the West" over Europe's others. Intended for readers in philosophy, musicology, art theory, the history of modernism, sound studies, and postcolonial studies, this book demonstrates that we cannot fully understand French theory in its novelty and complexity without music and sound. (shrink)
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  4.  10
    Mythology and Music.Nathan Cobb - 2016 - Aletheia: The Alpha Chi Journal of Undergraduate Scholarship 1 (1).
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  5.  18
    Robert A. Davis.Mythologies Of Innocence - 2011 - In Nancy Vansieleghem & David Kennedy (eds.), Philosophy for Children in Transition: Problems and Prospects. Wiley. pp. 210.
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  6.  86
    Myth and music: a semiotic approach to the aesthetics of myth in music, especially that of Wagner, Sibelius and Stravinsky.Eero Tarasti - 1979 - The Hague: Mouton.
    PART ONE 1. Introduction The purpose of this investigation is to explore the relations between myth and music. Although this research may be said to have a ...
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  7. Music critics and aestheticians are, on the surface, advocates and guardians of good music. But what exactly is “good”.Pop Music - 2004 - In Christopher Washburne & Maiken Derno (eds.), Bad Music: The Music We Love to Hate. Routledge. pp. 62.
     
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  8.  13
    Enactive consciousness, intertextuality, and musical free improvisation: deconstructing mythologies and finding connections.Bennett Hogg - 2011 - In David Clarke & Eric F. Clarke (eds.), Music and Consciousness: Philosophical, Psychological, and Cultural Perspectives. Oxford University Press. pp. 79--93.
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  9.  14
    Athenaeus' reading of the "Aulos" revolution ("Deipnosophistae" 14.616e-617f): new music and its myths.Pauline A. Leven - 2010 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 130:35-47.
    Scholarship on the late fifth-century BC New Music Revolution has mostly relied on the evidence provided by Athenaeus, the pseudo-Plutarch De musica and a few other late sources. To this date, however, very little has been done to understand Athenaeus' own rale in shaping our understanding of the musical culture of that period. This article argues that the historical context provided by Athenaeus in the section of the Deipnosophistae that cites passages of Melanippides, Telestes and Pratinas on the (...) of the aulos (14.616e-617f) is not a credible reflection of the contemporary aestheties and strategies of the authors and their works. Athenaeus is both following the structure of Aristotle's discussion of the topic of the aulos in Politics 8. 1341a-1342b and accepting the elite ideological position given there. Athenaeus' text thus does not provide evidence for the historical context in which late fifth-century authors were composing, but rather constitutes an attempt to illustrate Aristotle's argument with poetic examples from late fifth-century poets. (shrink)
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  10.  12
    'Os Capitães da Areia' e a coragem dos Erês: Notas sobre o imbricamento da arte, música e religião | 'Os Capitães da Areia' and the courage of the Erês: notes on the overlap of art, music and religion.Lia Machado dos Santos & Rosângela Fachel de Medeiros - 2021 - Revista Philia Filosofia, Literatura e Arte 3 (1):116-136.
    ResumoAs práticas culturais fundem, a todo o momento, diferentes relações entre sistemas culturais (EVEN-ZOHAR, 1990) que antes eram separados. Tais manifestações híbridas reconfiguram e desterritorializam processos simbólicos. Nesse sentido, o presente artigo realiza uma análise comparatista das relações intertextuais presentes na configuração artística do álbum Esú, do rapper brasileiro Baco Exu do Blues, em especial na faixa “Capitães de Areia” em relação ao romance quase homônimo de Jorge Amado, às referências à mitologia dos Erês, e à série fotográfica Laróyè, de (...)
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  11.  20
    A systematic review of comorbidity in PTSD using eye tracking and MEG.Music Selma, Rossell Susan & Ciorciari Joseph - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  12.  7
    Mapping dreams in a computational space: A phrase-level model for analyzing Fight/Flight and other typical situations in dream reports.Maja Gutman Music, Pavan Holur & Kelly Bulkeley - 2022 - Consciousness and Cognition 106 (C):103428.
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  13.  10
    Filozofija umjetnosti u mišljenju Anande Kentisha Coomaraswamyja.Lejla Mušić - 2007 - Filozofska Istrazivanja 27 (1):213-234.
    Filozofija umjetnosti u mišljenju Anande Kentisha Coomaraswamyja povezana je tradicionalnom filozofijom. Estetika, u modernom smislu, nema veze s tradicionalnom filozofijom umjetnosti, čiji temeljni princip nije »umjetnik je posebna vrsta čovjeka«, nego »svaki je čovjek posebna vrsta umjetnika«. Coomaraswamy nastoji redefinirati suvremeni pristup umjetnosti. Suvremeni umjetnici ne stvaraju svoja djela u skladu s Vječnim Istinama. Apstraktna umjetnost nije ikonografija transcendentalnih formi nego stvarna slika razjedinjenog uma. U cilju redefiniranja pristupa umjetnosti, temeljni se jezik umjetnosti mora promijeniti; edukatori i kustosi moraju biti (...)
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  14.  23
    Musical Aphorisms and Common Aesthetic Quandaries.Yaroslav Senyshyn - 2003 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 11 (2):112-129.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy of Music Education Review 11.2 (2003) 112-129 [Access article in PDF] Musical Aphorisms and Common Aesthetic Quandaries Yaroslav Senyshyn Simon Fraser University, Canada I have written in the style of aphorisms because their form is useful for both the sake of brevity and possible complexity. As well, they are historically significant as they have served many philosophers in the past and in our own time. Some will (...)
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  15.  17
    Community Experiments in Public Health Law and Policy.Angela K. McGowan, Gretchen G. Musicant, Sharonda R. Williams & Virginia R. Niehaus - 2015 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 43 (S1):10-14.
    Community-level legal and policy innovations or “experiments” can be important levers to improve health. States and localities are empowered through the 10th Amendment of the United States Constitution to use their police powers to protect the health and welfare of the public. Many legal and policy tools are available, including: the power to tax and spend; regulation; mandated education or disclosure of information, modifying the environment — whether built or natural ; and indirect regulation. These legal and policy interventions can (...)
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  16.  26
    Musical Aphorisms and Common Aesthetic Quandaries.Yaroslav Senyshyn - 2003 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 11 (2):112-129.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy of Music Education Review 11.2 (2003) 112-129 [Access article in PDF] Musical Aphorisms and Common Aesthetic Quandaries Yaroslav Senyshyn Simon Fraser University, Canada I have written in the style of aphorisms because their form is useful for both the sake of brevity and possible complexity. As well, they are historically significant as they have served many philosophers in the past and in our own time. Some will (...)
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  17.  18
    Associating Vehicles Automation With Drivers Functional State Assessment Systems: A Challenge for Road Safety in the Future.Christian Collet & Oren Musicant - 2019 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 13:408476.
    In the near future, vehicles will gradually gain more autonomous functionalities. Drivers’ activity will be less about driving than about monitoring intelligent systems to which driving action will be delegated. Road safety, therefore, remains dependent on the human factor and we should identify the limits beyond which driver’s functional state (DFS) may no longer be able to ensure safety. Depending on the level of automation, estimating the DFS may have different targets, e.g. assessing driver’s situation awareness in lower levels of (...)
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  18.  51
    Ahern, Daniel R. The Smile of Tragedy: Nietzsche and the Art of Virtue. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2012. Pp. xi+ 168. Cloth, $64.95. Alican, Necip Fikri. Rethinking Plato: A Cartesian Quest for the Real Plato. Value Inquiry Book Series. Amsterdam-New York: Rodopi, 2012. Pp. xxv+ 604. Cloth, $176.00. Allison, Henry E. Essays on Kant. Oxford-New York: Oxford University Press, 2012. Pp. xiv+ 289. [REVIEW]Fine Music - 2013 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 51 (1):145-147.
  19.  76
    The Battle for Middle-Earth: Tolkien’s Divine Design in The Lord of the Rings, by Fleming Rutledge; The Lord of the Rings and Philosophy: One Book to Rule Them All, ed. Gregory Bassham and Eric Bronson; Tolkien and the Invention of Myth: A Reader, ed. Jane Chance; Interrupted Music: The Making of Tolkien’s Mythology, by Verlyn Flieger; Smith of Wootton Major, by J. R. R. Tolkien. [REVIEW]Stratford Caldecott - 2005 - The Chesterton Review 31 (3-4):109-123.
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  20.  5
    Szymanowski, Eroticism and the Voices of Mythology.Stephen Downes - 2018 - Routledge.
    The desire to voice the artistic revelation of the truth of a precarious, multi-faceted, yet integrated self lies behind much of Szymanowski's work. This self is projected through the voices of deities who speak languages of love. The unifying figure is Eros, who may be embodied as Dionysus, Christ, Narcissus or Orpheus, and the gospel he proclaims tells of the resurrection and freedom of the desiring subject. This book examines Szymanowski's exploration of the relationship between the authorial voice, mythology (...)
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  21.  22
    Ethical pharmaceutical promotion and communications worldwide: codes and regulations.Jeffrey Francer, Jose Z. Izquierdo, Tamara Music, Kirti Narsai, Chrisoula Nikidis, Heather Simmonds & Paul Woods - 2014 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 9:7.
    The international pharmaceutical industry has made significant efforts towards ensuring compliant and ethical communication and interaction with physicians and patients. This article presents the current status of the worldwide governance of communication practices by pharmaceutical companies, concentrating on prescription-only medicines. It analyzes legislative, regulatory, and code-based compliance control mechanisms and highlights significant developments, including the 2006 and 2012 revisions of the International Federation of Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Associations (IFPMA) Code of Practice.
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  22.  28
    Discourses of unity and purpose in the sounds of fascist music: a multimodal approach.David Machin & John E. Richardson - 2012 - Critical Discourse Studies 9 (4):329-345.
    This article, taking a social semiotic approach, analyses two pieces of music written, shared and exalted by two pre-1945 European fascist movements – the German NSDAP and the British Union of Fascists. These movements, both political and cultural, employed mythologies of unity, common identity and purpose in order to elide the realities of social distinction and political–economic inequalities between bourgeois and proletarian groups in capitalist societies. Visually and inter-personally, the fascist cultural project communicated a machine-like certainty about a vision (...)
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  23.  9
    The Mythological Exemplum in Vergil’s “Eclogues”.Giorgos C. Paraskeviotis - 2014 - Hermes 142 (4):418-430.
    This paper is concerned with the mythological exemplum in Vergil’s “Eclogues”, examining those passages where certain legendary characters are used as significant mythological exempla (i. e. Ecl. 2.19-27, 4.31-36, 4.53-59, 6.27-30 and 8.69-71). These exempla whose subject is mostly related to music and song, are used to serve Vergil’s literary goals in the passages where they are found (i. e. literary function); but, most significantly they are closely associated with poetry and poetics, symbolising either the epic or pastoral genre (...)
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  24.  4
    Just in Time: Calling, Responding, and Making Music from the Soul.Kermit Campbell - 2023 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 56 (3-4):320-329.
    ABSTRACT Although Kairos in Greek mythology is often depicted as the winged son of Zeus who grants to those who lay hold of his single lock of hair their once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, in traditional African American culture, particularly when it comes to speech, Kairos is essentially family. Given how much African American speakers depend on seizing the moment to invoke spiritual connections, emit laughter, and profess the truth, Kairos, or what we might call CPT (“Colored People’s Time”), can be summoned (...)
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  25.  5
    Music as an Archetype in the 'Collective Unconscious'.Anthony Palmer - 1997 - Dialogue and Universalism 7 (3):187-200.
    The making of music has been sufficiently deep and widespread diachronically and geographically to suggest a genetic imperative. C.G. Jung's 'Collective Unconscious' and the accompanying archetypes suggest that music is a psychic necessity because it is part of the brain structure. Therefore, the present view of aesthetics may need drastic revision, particularly on views of music as pleasure, ideas of disinterest, differences between so-called high and low art, cultural identity, cultural conditioning, and art-for-art's sake.All cultures, past and (...)
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  26.  33
    Absolute Music, Mechanical Reproduction.Arved Mark Ashby - 2010 - University of California Press.
    The recorded musical text -- Recording, repetition, and meaning in absolute music -- Schnabel's rationalism, Gould's pragmatism -- Digital mythologies -- Beethoven and the iPod Nation -- Photo/phono/pornography -- Mahler as imagist.
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  27.  5
    The Hatred of Music.Pascal Quignard - 2016 - New Haven: Yale University Press. Edited by Matthew Amos & Fredrik Rönnbäck.
    _How does a man who once adored music beyond measure come to revile it as a form of tyranny?_ Throughout Pascal Quignard’s distinguished literary career, music has been a recurring obsession. As a musician he organized the International Festival of Baroque Opera and Theatre at Versailles in the early 1990s, and thus was instrumental in the rediscovery of much forgotten classical music. Yet in 1994 he abruptly renounced all musical activities. _The Hatred of Music_ is Quignard’s masterful (...)
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  28.  9
    The Tanagra Project: Investigations at an Ancient Boeotian City and in its Countryside (2000-2002).John L. Bintliff, Emeri Farinetti, Kostas Sbonias, Kalliope Sarri, Vladimir Stissi, Jeroen Poblome, Ariane Ceulemans, Karlien De Craen, Athanasios Vionis, Branko Music, Dusan Kramberger & Bozidar Slapsak - 2004 - Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 128 (21):541-606.
    John Bintliff et alii Le Tanagra Project : recherches dans une cité antique de Béotie et son territoire (2000-2002) p.541-606 Cet article présente les résultats préliminaires du Leiden-Ljubljana Field Project dans la cité antique de Tanagra, en Béotie orientale, et dans ses environs immédiats. Les travaux ont débuté en 1999, avec une vaste équipe de chercheurs et d'étudiants des Pays-Bas, de Belgique, de Slovénie et de Grèce, sous la direction de John Bintliff et Bozidar Slapsak et la sous-direction de Kostas (...)
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  29.  4
    The Hatred of Music.Matthew Amos & Fredrik Rönnbäck (eds.) - 2016 - New Haven: Yale University Press.
    _How does a man who once adored music beyond measure come to revile it as a form of tyranny?_ Throughout Pascal Quignard’s distinguished literary career, music has been a recurring obsession. As a musician he organized the International Festival of Baroque Opera and Theatre at Versailles in the early 1990s, and thus was instrumental in the rediscovery of much forgotten classical music. Yet in 1994 he abruptly renounced all musical activities. _The Hatred of Music_ is Quignard’s masterful (...)
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  30.  9
    Musical Performance in the Age of Postmodernism.Gabriella Astalosh, Lesia Mykhailivna Mykulanynets & Myroslava Mykhajlivna Zhyshkovych - 2022 - Postmodern Openings 13 (1):01-16.
    The article is devoted to postmodernism musical performance. There was realized a comprehensive retrospective analysis of the phenomenon development from ancient period to nowadays. It was proved that in ancient times interpretation was explained as a form of mythological worldview embodiment; in the Middle Ages as a way of uniting man and God; in Rrenaissance as a means of harmonizing material and spiritual components of personality; in Baroque as a method of theatricality of person's existence; in Classicism as an opportunity (...)
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  31.  7
    Music as a subject of discussion in A.F. Losev’s philosophical prose.Konstantin Zenkin - 2020 - Studies in East European Thought 72 (3-4):363-376.
    This article focuses on Alexei Losev’s literary texts that embrace his mythology of music: “I was 19 years old,” “A meteor,” “A woman-thinker,” “The Tchaikovsky trio,” and “An encounter.” It is shown that Losev’s musical mythology developed from his early musical-critical works—through the artistic-mythological episodes of his philosophical works per se —to his fiction of the 1930s. Losev’s intentionally abstract philosophy of music required to be complemented by the artistic, emotional, socially and historically specific expression. The (...)
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  32.  1
    El grito de la Gorgona: cristalización musical del mito.Arturo García - 2018 - Aisthesis 63:145-170.
    This article debates about the interrelation between the music and myth as a creative model in the archaic Greece. The idea is to show how the myth gives form and content to the narrative intonation of events in the nomos [νόμος], the first musical form of history that emerge in a close relation between the musical practice and mythology, expressed throughout the archaic poetry and the musical contests in Delphos. The article’s title synthetized the archetypical idea of the (...)
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  33.  7
    Machiavelliana: The Living Machiavelli in Modern Mythologies.Michael Jackson & Damian Grace - 2018 - Brill | Rodopi.
    _Machiavelliana_ is the first comprehensive study of the uses and abuses made of Niccolò Machiavelli’s name in management, primatology, leadership, power, as well as in novels, plays, commercial enterprises, television dramas, operas, rap music, children’s books, and more.
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  34.  13
    Imagination, music, and the emotions: a philosophical study.Saam Trivedi - 2017 - Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
    Articulates an imaginationist solution to the question of how purely instrumental music can be perceived by a listener as having emotional content. Both musicians and laypersons can perceive purely instrumental music without words or an associated story or program as expressing emotions such as happiness and sadness. But how? In this book, Saam Trivedi discusses and critiques the leading philosophical approaches to this question, including formalism, metaphorism, expression theories, arousalism, resemblance theories, and persona theories. Finding these to be (...)
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  35.  14
    Intersemioticity and intertextuality.Dinda L. Gorlée - 2016 - Sign Systems Studies 44 (4):587-622.
    Jakobson introduced the concept of intersemioticity as transmutation of verbal signs by nonverbal sign systems (1959). Intersemioticity generates the linguistic-and-cultural elements of intersemiosis (from without), crystallizing mythology and archetypal symbolism, and intertextuality (from within), analyzing the human emotions in the cultural situation of language-and-music aspects. The operatic example of Ibsen’s Peer Gynt (1867) intertextualized the cultural trends of Scandinavia. This literary script was set to music by Grieg to make an operatic expression. After the “picaresque” adventures, Peer (...)
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  36.  12
    Music and postwar transitions in the 19th and 20th centuries.Anaïs Fléchet, Martin Guerpin, Philippe Gumplowicz & Barbara L. Kelly (eds.) - 2023 - [New York]: Berghahn Books.
    Music and Postwar Transitions in the 19th and 20th Centuries is the first book to highlight the significance of the idea of 'postwar transition' in the field of music and to demonstrate how the contribution of musicians, composers, and their publics have influenced contemporary understandings of war. At the intersection of four domains including: the relationship between music and war culture, commemorative and consolatory dimensions of music, migration and exile, and the links between music, cultural (...)
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  37.  7
    Imaginarios musicales: mito y música.Blanca Solares (ed.) - 2015 - México, D.F.: Editorial Itaca.
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  38.  6
    Mythos & neue Musik: die Faszination am Mythos als Ort kulturellen Wissens.Birgit Johanna Wertenson - 2018 - Würzburg: Königshausen und Neumann.
    Mythos und Neue Musik' erforscht erstmalig die spannende Beziehung zwischen den antiken Mythen und der Musik. Birgit Johanna Wertenson widmet sich vor allem zeitgenössischen Kompositionen und weist über die beiden Figuren Orpheus und Kassandra anschaulich nach, dass die Beschäftigung mit dem Mythos auch heute eine komplexe Auseinandersetzung mit elementaren Lebensfragen des Menschen bedeutet. Da die archaischen Figuren stets neue Rezeptionen herausfordern, bleibt der Mythos als Ort kulturellen Wissens aktuell. Das Buch widmet sich dem Thema über einen Dialog aus Philosophie, Kultur- (...)
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  39.  8
    Music and Affectivity in the Age of Artificial Intelligence.Vinicius de Aguiar - forthcoming - Topoi:1-11.
    Music and affects share a long history. In recent times, 4E cognitive sciences (embodied, embedded, enacted, and extended), situated affectivity, and related ecological theoretical frameworks have been conceptualizing music as a case of a tool for feeling. Drawing on this debate, I propose to further theorize the role of music in situating our affectivity by analyzing how the very affective affordances of music are technologically situated. In other words, I propose to shift the attention from (...) as a tool for feeling to the tools for feeling music. I argue that the experience of music as a tool for feeling may be altered, enhanced, or lessened depending on the tools for feeling music. I investigate the extent to which AI might be a case of a tool for feeling music and examine the influence it could exert over musical affectivity. I conclude that AI can be considered a tool for feeling music of curatorial type and that the limitations and/or biases of AI as a method risk lessening the power of musical affective affordances. (shrink)
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  40.  20
    Hanslick, Eduard.Alexander Wilfing, and & Christoph Landerer - 2019 - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Eduard Hanslick Eduard Hanslick was a Prague-born Austrian aesthetic theorist, music critic, and the first professor of aesthetics and history of music at the University of Vienna, who is commonly considered the founder of musical formalism in aesthetics. His seminal treatise Vom Musikalisch-Schönen of 1854 is one of the most … Continue reading Hanslick, Eduard →.
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  41.  4
    Music and the crises of the modern subject.Michael Leslie Klein - 2015 - Indianapolis: Indiana University Press.
    Music and the symptom -- The acoustic mirror as formative of auditory pleasure and fantasy : Chopin's Berceuse, Brahms's Romanze, and Saariaho's "Parfum de l'instant" -- Debussy and the three machines of the Proustian narrative -- Chopin dreams : the Mazurka in C♯ minor as sinthome -- Intermezzo : on agency -- Postmodern quotation, the signifying chain, and the erasure of history -- Lutoslawski, molar and molecular.
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  42.  5
    Adorno, Music, and the Ineffable.Michael Gallope - 2019 - In Peter Eli Gordon (ed.), A companion to Adorno. Hoboken: Wiley. pp. 427–442.
    This chapter reconstructs Adorno's practices of listening to music through the prism of two categories: exact listening and inconsistent listening. Exact listening depends upon a distinct kind of intellectual confidence about the capacity for an intellectual to listen to and comprehend the forms of a given work. This practice entails his well‐known writings on the resistant powers of fractured forms in late Beethoven and the Second Viennese School; as well as his critiques of Wagner, Stravinsky, jazz, popular music, (...)
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  43.  8
    Music and the myth of wholeness: toward a new aesthetic paradigm.Tim Hodgkinson - 2016 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
    A new theory of aesthetics and music, grounded in the collision between language and the body. In this book, Tim Hodgkinson proposes a theory of aesthetics and music grounded in the boundary between nature and culture within the human being. His analysis discards the conventional idea of the human being as an integrated whole in favor of a rich and complex field in which incompatible kinds of information—biological and cultural—collide. It is only when we acknowledge the clash of (...)
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  44.  7
    Science, music, and mathematics: the deepest connections.Michael Edgeworth McIntyre - 2021 - Hackensack, NJ: World Scientific Publishing.
    Professor Michael Edgeworth McIntyre is an eminent scientist who has also had a part-time career as a musician. From a lifetime's thinking, he offers this extraordinary synthesis exposing the deepest connections between science, music, and mathematics, while avoiding equations and technical jargon. He begins with perception psychology and the dichotomization instinct and then takes us through biological evolution, human language, and acausality illusions all the way to the climate crisis and the weaponization of the social media, and beyond that (...)
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  45.  26
    Music and ethics.Marcel Cobussen - 2012 - Burlington: Ashgate. Edited by Nanette Nielsen.
    Listening -- Discourse -- Interaction -- Affect -- Voice -- Engagement.
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  46.  7
    Music and narrative since 1900.Michael Leslie Klein & Nicholas W. Reyland (eds.) - 2012 - Indianapolis: Indiana University Press.
    This comprehensive volume offers a wide-ranging perspective on the stories that art music has told since the start of the 20th century. Contributors challenge the broadly held opinion that the loss of tonality in some music after 1900 also meant the loss of narrative in that music. To the contrary, the editors and essayists in this book demonstrate how experiments in approaching narrative in other media, such as fiction and cinema, suggested fresh possibilities for musical narrative, which (...)
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  47. Wittgenstein, Modern Music, and the Myth of Progress.Eran Guter - 2017 - In Niiniluoto Ilkka & Wallgren Thomas (eds.), On the Human Condition – Essays in Honour of Georg Henrik von Wright’s Centennial Anniversary, Acta Philosophica Fennica vol. 93. Societas Philosophica Fennica. pp. 181-199.
    Georg Henrik von Wright was not only the first interpreter of Wittgenstein, who argued that Spengler’s work had reinforced and helped Wittgenstein to articulate his view of life, but also the first to consider seriously that Wittgenstein’s attitude to his times makes him unique among the great philosophers, that the philosophical problems which Wittgenstein was struggling, indeed his view of the nature of philosophy, were somehow connected with features of our culture or civilization. -/- In this paper I draw inspiration (...)
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  48. Music and musical thought in Rāmāyaṇa and Mahābhārata.Kaustubh Gaurh - 2022 - In Himanshu Roy (ed.), Social thought in Indic civilization. Thousand Oaks, California: SAGE Publications India Pvt.
     
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  49. Popular music and heritage embarrassment in Brazil.Carlos Sandroni - 2024 - In Chiara Bortolotto & Ahmed Skounti (eds.), Intangible cultural heritage and sustainable development: inside a UNESCO Convention. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  50.  6
    Music and the Generosity of God.Gerald C. Liu - 2017 - Cham: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan.
    What if sounds everywhere lavish divine generosity? Merging insights from Jean-Luc Marion with musical ingenuity from Pierre Boulez and John Cage's 4'33", Gerald C. Liu blends the phenomenological, theological, and musical to formulate a hypothesis that in all places, soundscapes instantiate divine giving without boundary. He aims to widen apprehension of holiness in the world, and privileges the ubiquity of sound as a limitless and easily accessible portal for discovering the inexhaustible magnitude of divine giving.
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