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Masculinity and Western Musical Practice (Paperback)
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Masculinity and Western Musical Practice (Paperback)
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How have men used art music? How have they listened to and
brandished the musical forms of the Western classical tradition and
how has music intervened in their identity formations? This
collection of essays addresses these questions by examining some of
the ways in which men, music and masculinity have been implicated
with each other since the Middle Ages. Feminist musicologies have
already dealt extensively with music and gender, from the
'phallocentric' tendencies of the Western tradition, to the
explicit marginalization of women from that tradition. This book
builds on that work by turning feminist critical approaches towards
the production, rhetorical engagement and subversion of
masculinities in twelve different musical case studies. In other
disciplines within the arts and humanities, 'men's studies' is a
well-established field. Musicology has only recently begun to
address critically music's engagement with masculinity and as a
result has sometimes thereby failed to recognize its own discursive
misogyny. This book does not seek to cover the field
comprehensively but, rather, to explore in detail some of the ways
in which musical practices do the cultural work of masculinity. The
book is structured into three thematic sections: effeminate and
virile musics and masculinities; national masculinities, national
musics; and identities, voices, discourses. Within these themes,
the book ranges across a number of specific topics: late medieval
masculinities; early modern discourses of music, masculinity and
medicine; Renaissance Italian masculinities; eighteenth-,
nineteenth- and early twentieth-century ideas of creativity, gender
and canonicity; masculinity, imperialist and nationalist ideologies
in the nineteenth century, and constructions of the masculine voice
in late nineteenth- and twentieth-century opera and song. While the
case studies are methodologically disparate and located in
different historical and geographical locations, they all share a
common concern for a critical revaluation of the role of
masculinity (in all its varied representations) in art music
practices.
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