by Richard Leppert (Editor)
This provocative volume of essays is now available in paperback. The contributors to this volume - musicologists, sociologists, cultural theorists - all challenge the view that music occupies an autonomous aesthetic sphere. Recently, socially and politically grounded enterprises such as feminism, semiotics and deconstruction have effected a major transformation in the ways in which the arts and humanities are studied, leading in turn to a systematic investigation of the implicit assumptions underlying the critical methods of the last two hundred years. Influenced by these approaches, the writers here question a prevailing ideology that insists there is a division between music and society and examine the ways in which the two do in fact interact and mediate one another within and across socio-cultural boundaries.
Format: Illustrated
Pages: 224
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 15 Jun 1989
ISBN 10: 0521379776
ISBN 13: 9780521379779
Book Overview: A provocative volume of essays challenging the view that music occupies an autonomous aesthetic sphere.