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El. knyga: Phantom Limbs: On Musical Bodies

Translated by ,
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 02-Nov-2015
  • Leidėjas: Fordham University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780823267088
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 02-Nov-2015
  • Leidėjas: Fordham University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780823267088

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The prostheses Peter Szendy explores--those peculiar artifacts known as musical instruments--are not only technical devices but also bodies that live a strange phantom life, as uncanny as a sixth finger or a third lung.

The musicological impulse to inventory those bodies that produce sound is called into question here. In Szendy's hands, its respectable corpus of scholarship is read aslant, so as to tease out what it usually prefers to hide: hybrids and grafts produced by active fictions, monsters, and chimera awaiting the opportunity to be embodied. Beyond these singular bodies that music composes and disposes there lies the figure of a collective "social" body ready to emerge amid an innervated apparatus that operates at a distance, telepathically.

Phantom Limbs touches on bodies of all shapes and sizes that haunt the edges of music's conceptualizations. Music continually reinvents such bodies and reconvenes them in new collective formations. It is their dynamics and crystallizations that Szendy auscultates on a motley corpus that includes Bach, Diderot, Berlioz, Eisenstein, Disney, and Monk.

Recenzijos

"The first truly comprehensive critique of organology-the study of musical instruments as related to the human body. A smart, lucid and original study, translated superbly by Will Bishop." -- -Richard A. Rand Professor of English Emeritus, University of Alabama "A patient meditation on the musical body. Szendy provides a stunning reading of the digital history of the finger, or 'digit.' We witness the multiplication of digits, the multiplication of hands and fingers, the regulation of bodies in the hope of having as many fingers as we need to play on the keyboard. But there is more to musical bodies; there are the virtual bodies of instruments who would play without contact of touch, repeating the motion of music that touches us through the ether, and there is the body of a conductor, who governs the body politic that is the orchestra. This is a compelling study." -- -Gil Anidjar Columbia University "A very original discussion of the production of the body through music. Szendy takes up a variety of musical practices in their fascinating and little-known history." -- -Susan Bernstein Brown University

Training 1(4)
Chapter 1 Interpreting Bodies
5(8)
Chapter 2 Effictions
13(8)
Chapter 3 Organologics (1): The Erasure of Bodies
21(8)
Chapter 4 Touch-ups, or The Return of Bodies
29(4)
Chapter 5 Idiotisms, or The Dialect of Bodies
33(6)
Chapter 6 Monk, a Legend
39(8)
Chapter 7 Traces of fingers
47(8)
Chapter 8 Digital Rhetoric
55(4)
Chapter 9 Ablations and Grafts (Too Many Fingers)
59(6)
Chapter 10 Romantic Fingers (System of Touch)
65(4)
Chapter 11 Feet
69(4)
Chapter 12 Joyful Tropiques (Evolution, Revolutions)
73(4)
Chapter 11 Two Dispatches (One Fictive and the Other Dreamed Up)
77(10)
Chapter 14 Organologies (2): Autophony
87(6)
Chapter 15 Genesis (1): Ocular Harpsichord, Organ of Flavors
93(8)
Chapter 16 Telepathy
101(8)
Chapter 17 Scruples (Clones and Stand-ins)
109(4)
Chapter 18 Conducting (Seen from the Back)
113(4)
Chapter 19 Genesis (2): Fantasia, or "Plasmaticity"
117(4)
Chapter 20 Touching from Afar
121(12)
Chapter 21 Organologies (3): Areality
133(6)
Chapter 22 Bodies Electric
139(10)
Chapter 23 Mass Formations
149(14)
P.S. 163(2)
Notes 165
Peter Szendy is David Herlihy Professor of Humanities and Comparative Literature at Brown University and musicological advisor for the concert programs at the Paris Philharmonie. His books include Of Stigmatology: Punctuation as Experience; All Ears: The Aesthetics of Espionage; Apocalypse-Cinema: 2012 and Other Ends of the World; Kant in the Land of Extraterrestrials; Hits: Philosophy in the Jukebox; and Listen: A History of Our Ears..