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The Making of European Music in the Long Eighteenth Century

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martes, 12 de noviembre de 2024
The Making of European Music in the Long Eighteenth Century © 2014 by Oxford University Press The Making of European Music in the Long Eighteenth Century © 2014 by Oxford University Press
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Oxford University Press comunica la inminente publicación, en su colección New Cultural History of Music, del libro The Making of European Music in the Long Eighteenth Century de D. R. M. Irving, investigador de la Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats (ICREA) y profesor-investigador de la Institució Milà i Fontanals de Recerca en Humanitats, CSIC, Barcelona.

Las investigaciones del Dr. Irving se centran en el papel de la música en el colonialismo moderno temprano y el contacto intercultural. Es autor de Colonial Counterpoint: Music in Early Modern Manila (2010), coeditor de la revista Eighteenth-Century Music con W. Dean Sutcliffe  y coeditor general de A Cultural History of Western Music (2023) con Alexander Rehding .

Reproducimos a continuación la nota de prensa sobre The Making of European Music in the Long Eighteenth Century remitida por Oxford University Press:

Musical representations of Europe in myth and allegory are well known, but when and under what circumstances did the words "European" and "music" become linked together? What did the resulting term mean in music before 1800 and how did it evolve into the label "Western music" which features so prominently in pedagogical and scholarly discourses?
In The Making of European Music in the Long Eighteenth Century, author D. R. M. Irving traces the emergence of such large-scale categories in Western European thought. Beginning in the 1670s, Jesuit missionaries in China began to refer to "European music," and for the next hundred years the term appeared almost exclusively in comparison with musics from other parts of the world. It entered common use from the 1770s, and in the 1830s became synonymous with a new concept of "Western music." 
Western European writers also associated these terms with notions of "progress" and "perfection." Meanwhile, changing ideas about "modern" Europe's cultural relationship with classical antiquity, together with theories that systematically and condescendingly racialized people from other continents, influenced the ways that these scholars imagined and interpreted musical pasts around the globe.
Irving weaves his analyses throughout the book's historical examinations, suggesting that "European music" originates from self-fashioning in contexts of intercultural comparison outside the continent, rather than from the resolution of national aesthetic differences within it. He shows that "Western music" as understood today arose in line with the growth of Orientalism and increasing awareness of musics of "the East." All such reductive terms often imply homogeneity and essentialism, and Irving asks what a reassessment of their beginnings might mean for music history.
Taken as a whole, the book shows how a renewed critique of primary sources can help dismantle historiographical constructs that arose within narratives of musical pasts involving Europe.

Índice de The Making of European Music in the Long Eighteenth Century

Introduction: Musics of Continents and Hemispheres

Part I: "Europe" in Music, Music in "Europe"

Introduction

1. Musical Constructions of Europe in Myth and Allegory

2. Europe as Place: Music and the Imagined Extent of a Continent

Part II: "European Music"

Introduction

3. Europeans, "Franks," and "Their" Musics

4. The Emergence of the "European Music" Concept

Part III: "Modern European Music" and "Western Music"

Introduction

5. "Modern" Europe and "Ancient" Others in Musical Thought

6. Accidental Occident: The Setting of "the West" in Music History

Epilogue

Bibliography

Index

Notas

D. R. M. Irving, "The Making of European Music in the Long Eighteenth Century", Oxford-New York, Oxford University Press, 2024, 352 Pages and 19 illustrations. ISBN: 9780197632185 Hardcover 134,53 € Ebook 135,98

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