Listening to Reason: Culture, Subjectivity, and Nineteenth-Century Music [NOOK Book]

Overview

This pathbreaking work reveals the pivotal role of music--musical works and musical culture--in debates about society, self, and culture that forged European modernity through the "long nineteenth century." Michael Steinberg argues that, from the late 1700s to the early 1900s, music not only reflected but also embodied modern subjectivity as it increasingly engaged and criticized old regimes of power, belief, and representation. His purview ranges from Mozart to Mahler, and from the sacred to the secular, ...

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Listening to Reason: Culture, Subjectivity, and Nineteenth-Century Music

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Overview

This pathbreaking work reveals the pivotal role of music--musical works and musical culture--in debates about society, self, and culture that forged European modernity through the "long nineteenth century." Michael Steinberg argues that, from the late 1700s to the early 1900s, music not only reflected but also embodied modern subjectivity as it increasingly engaged and criticized old regimes of power, belief, and representation. His purview ranges from Mozart to Mahler, and from the sacred to the secular, including opera as well as symphonic and solo instrumental music.

Defining subjectivity as the experience rather than the position of the "I," Steinberg argues that music's embodiment of subjectivity involved its apparent capacity to "listen" to itself, its past, its desires. Nineteenth-century music, in particular music from a north German Protestant sphere, inspired introspection in a way that the music and art of previous periods, notably the Catholic baroque with its emphasis on the visual, did not.

The book analyzes musical subjectivity initially from Mozart through Mendelssohn, then seeks it, in its central chapter, in those aspects of Wagner that contradict his own ideological imperialism, before finally uncovering its survival in the post-Wagnerian recovery from musical and other ideologies.

Engagingly written yet theoretically sophisticated, Listening to Reason represents a startlingly original corrective to cultural history's long-standing inhibition to engage with music while presenting a powerful alternative vision of the modern.

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Editorial Reviews

Beethoven Forum
Listening to Reason is a work of high integrity; it has a great deal to teach. Indeed, it's a book of importance.
Times Literary Supplement - Peter Quinn
[Steinberg's] analyses—music not as closed art form but as permeable cultural phenomenon—elicit some fruitful and unexpected results. . . . [A] deeply rewarding book.
BBC Music Magazine - Ivan Hewett
Michael P. Steinberg's subject is the vast change that came over music in the 19th century, from something couched in public terms—religious or ceremonial—to something that feels essentially private, even when it happens in public. It's a familiar idea, but what makes this book original is the way he complicates it with other historical currents.
Notes - Peter Mercer-Taylor
With Listening to Reason: Culture, Subjectivity, and NIneteenth-Century Music, Michael P. Steinberg offers a provocative, intermittently brilliant rooting of nineteenth-century music . . . in contemporaneous cultural and intellectual history. Few major German composers of the era go unexamined, and few readers are likely to walk away from the book with their understanding of this repertoire, and the culture from and for which it speaks, unrevised.
Journal of Modern History - Jane F. Fulcher
Michael P. Steinberg has not only made a simultaneous contribution to the fields of cultural history and musicology, he has authoritatively illustrated the importance of their interaction, or the close connection between the questions, theoretical approaches, and methodologies with which they are mutually engaged. . . . Steinberg has made a truly major contribution to our understanding of how musical meaning, values, and creativity in the Austro German sphere were intertwined with the ambient ideological and political tensions.
" Beethoven Forum hard Leppert

Listening to Reason is a work of high integrity; it has a great deal to teach. Indeed, it's a book of importance.
Times Literary Supplement
[Steinberg's] analyses—music not as closed art form but as permeable cultural phenomenon—elicit some fruitful and unexpected results. . . . [A] deeply rewarding book.
— Peter Quinn
BBC Music Magazine
Michael P. Steinberg's subject is the vast change that came over music in the 19th century, from something couched in public terms—religious or ceremonial—to something that feels essentially private, even when it happens in public. It's a familiar idea, but what makes this book original is the way he complicates it with other historical currents.
— Ivan Hewett
Notes
With Listening to Reason: Culture, Subjectivity, and NIneteenth-Century Music, Michael P. Steinberg offers a provocative, intermittently brilliant rooting of nineteenth-century music . . . in contemporaneous cultural and intellectual history. Few major German composers of the era go unexamined, and few readers are likely to walk away from the book with their understanding of this repertoire, and the culture from and for which it speaks, unrevised.
— Peter Mercer-Taylor
Journal of Modern History
Michael P. Steinberg has not only made a simultaneous contribution to the fields of cultural history and musicology, he has authoritatively illustrated the importance of their interaction, or the close connection between the questions, theoretical approaches, and methodologies with which they are mutually engaged. . . . Steinberg has made a truly major contribution to our understanding of how musical meaning, values, and creativity in the Austro German sphere were intertwined with the ambient ideological and political tensions.
— Jane F. Fulcher
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781400835737
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication date: 1/2/2010
  • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
  • Format: eBook
  • Pages: 264
  • File size: 336 KB

Meet the Author

Michael P. Steinberg is Professor of History and Music, and Inaugural Director of the Cogut Center for the Humanities at Brown University. He is Associate Editor of "The Musical Quarterly" as well as author of "Austria as Theater and Ideology: The Meaning of the Salzburg Festival", which won Austria's Victor Adler Prize for History in 2001. He is also the recipient of the Berlin Prize and a Guggenheim Fellowship.
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Table of Contents

List of Illustrations ix
Preface xi
INTRODUCTION 1
CHAPTER ONE
Staging Subjectivity in the Mozart/Da Ponte Operas 18
Staging Subjectivity 18
Don Giovanni and the Scene of Patricide 23
Le nozze di Figaro and the Scene of Emancipation 39
Cosi'fan tutte and the Scene of Instruction 51
CHAPTER TWO
Beethoven: Heroism and Abstraction 59
Heroism and Abstraction 59
Heroism and Anxiety 67
Fidelio 73
The Symphony No.9 84
CHAPTER THREE
Canny and Uncanny Histories in Biedermeier Music 94
Biedermeier Music 94
Mendelssohn's Canny Histories 97
Schumann's Uncanny Histories 122
Back to Schubert 131
CHAPTER FOUR
The Family Romances of Music Drama 133
The Family Romances of Music Drama 133
Siegmund's Death 142
Subjectivity and Identity 153
CHAPTER FIVE
The Voice of the People at the Moment of the Nation 163
People and Nations 163
Brahms, 1868 174
Verdi, 1874 178
Dvorák,1890 186
CHAPTER SIX
Minor Modernisms 193
Music Trauma, or, Is There Life after Wagner? 193
Three Fins de Siècle 202
The Road into the Open 220
CHAPTER SEVEN
The Musical Unconscious 226
Index 237
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