The Locator -- [(subject = "Esthetica")]

50 records matched your query       


Record 34 | Previous Record | MARC Display | Next Record | Search Results
Author:
Katz, Ruth, 1927-
Title:
The powers of music : aesthetic theory and the invention of opera / Ruth Katz ; with a new introduction by the author.
Publisher:
Transaction Publishers,
Copyright Date:
©1994
Description:
xxi, 224 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Subject:
Music--Philosophy and aesthetics.
Opera.
Opera--Italy.
Music--Philosophy and aesthetics.
Opera.
Italy.
Opera's.
Esthetica.
Anfänge-1700--Anfänge-1700
Other Titles:
Divining the powers of music
Notes:
Originally published: Divining the powers of music : aesthetic theory and the origins of opera. New York : Pendragon Press, ©1986, in: Aesthetics in music series. Includes bibliographical references (pages 199-208) and index.
Contents:
Index Preface -- List of Illustrations -- (starting p. 209) Explaining the Origins of Opera -- Ch. 2 Opera as a Laboratory for Defining the Powers of Music (starting p. 19) -- Ch. 3 The Camerata as Invisible College (starting p. 49) -- Ch. 4 Divining the Powers of Music (starting p. 77) -- Ch. 5 Orfeo: Unleashing the Powers of Music (starting p. 111) -- Ch. 6 An Invitation to Music (starting p. 135) -- Ch. 7 Exhaustion of the Paradigm (starting p. 177) -- Bibliography (starting p. 199) -- Index (starting p. 209)
Summary:
"In this cultural history, Ruth Katz conceives of opera as a laboratory dedicated to exploration of the powers hidden in the interaction between words and music. Opera combines not only music and libretto, but the sensuality, acting out, and lyricism that characterize the popular culture of the Italians. The Powers of Music is thus a contribution to cultural studies, providing unique insight into the social meaning of opera in Italy."--BOOK JACKET. "According to Katz, opera's origins in Renaissance Italy can be traced to numerous characteristics of life at that time. Among them are: the belief of the Humanists that the magical properties of music could be harnessed; the transition from polyphony to monody that gave musical expression to individualism: the melodramatic propensity of Italian culture reflected in its literary and theatrical arts; and the salons of Florentine aristocrats, scientists, and artists whose agenda included the challenge to rediscover how the ancient Greeks succeeded in heightening the rhetorical power of words by allying them with music. Katz discusses each of these factors in detail."--BOOK JACKET. "In her new introduction, Katz reconsiders her original work by discussing three topics. The first has to do with the perception that there has been a major change in the academic climate for this kind of analysis. The second relates to her concern with the eighteenth-century expansion of the Florentine comparison of the attributes of the arts, from which music emerges as the purest of all, for being freest of external reference. Third, she reconsiders her initial impression that opera was on the wane. The Powers of Music is an intriguing study that will be of interest to sociologists, cultural historians, and scholars of communication and popular culture."--BOOK JACKET.
ISBN:
9781560007470
1560007478
OCLC:
(OCoLC)29667984
LCCN:
94001960
Locations:
UNUX074 -- University of Northern Iowa - Rod Library (Cedar Falls)

Initiate Another SILO Locator Search

This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.