Broken beauty : musical modernism and the representation of disability / Joseph N. Straus.

  • Straus, Joseph Nathan
Date:
[2018]
  • Books

About this work

Description

Joseph Strauss, eminent music theorist and leader in the study of music and disability, presents a truly ground-breaking take on musical modernism--demonstrating in an expansive and vivid multimedia presentation that modernist music is inextricably entwined with attitudes toward disability. In Broken Beauty, Straus argues that the most characteristic features of musical modernism--fractured forms, immobilized harmonies, conflicting textural layers, radical simplification of means in some cases, and radical complexity and hermeticism in others--can be understood as musical depictions of disability conditions, including deformity/disfigurement, mobility impairment, madness, idiocy, and autism. Against the traditional medical model of disability, which sees it as a bodily defect requiring diagnosis and normalization or cure, this new sociocultural model of disability sees it as created by culture, and generative of culture. Broken beauty illustrates how disability is right at the core of musical modernism; it is one of the things that musical modernism is fundamentally about. [Publisher description]

Publication/Creation

New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2018]

Physical description

xi, 203 pages ; 25 cm

Contents

Representing disability -- Narrating disability -- Stravinsky's aesthetics of disability -- Madness -- Idiocy -- Autism -- Therapeutic music theory and the tyranny of the normal.

Bibliographic information

Includes bibliographical references (pages 185-198) and index.

Languages

Where to find it

  • LocationStatus
    History of Medicine
    IVH.U
    Open shelves

Permanent link

Identifiers

ISBN

  • 9780190871208
  • 0190871202