MARC Record
Leader
001
18539
005
20250120120059.0
008
120119s1998 0 e
020
a| 0520214129
041
a| eng
100
a| Goehr, Lydia
4| aut
9| 17049
245
a| The quest for voice: Music, politics, and the limits of philosophy
260
a| Berkeley
b| University of California Press
c| 1998
300
a| 224 pages
520
a| What is musical meaning? Where does it reside and how can it be known? Does it make a difference to its meaning if the music is composed with or without words, as a symphony or a song? Why is it claimed that music can express human feelings with an immediacy not possible in other languages or arts? What is contained in the claim that music is autonomous, or that it is prophetic and can articulate a 'politics for the future'? Concentrating on the music, politics, and philosophy of Richard Wagner, Lydia Goehr addresses these classic questions of German Romanticism. On the way, she offers an account of the peculiar relation that was established between philosophy and music in the nineteenth century; a philosophical and political reading of Wagner's opera Die Meistersinger; an account of the Wagner-Hanslick debate on musical formalism; an argument for resituating musical autonomy in the spirit of Wagner's Gesamtkuntswerk; an account of the competing performance ideals embodied in Wagner's Bayreuth; and an interpretation of Wagner's legacy as experienced by composers exiled from Nazi Germany.Goehr's historical and musicological enquiries are unified by a philosophical study of the impact of a transcendental or critical perspective on philosophical theory. She argues that philosophy needs to take its limits seriously to accommodate the primacy of music's practice.
942
c| BOO
2| ddc
920
a| boek
852
b| ORPH
c| ORPH
j| ORPH.AES GOEH
999
c| 18539
d| 18539