Victorian Soundscapes

Victorian Soundscapes

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  • Author: John M. Picker
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN: 0195151917
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 233

Far from the hushed restraint we associate with the Victorians, their world pulsated with sound. This book shows how, in more ways than one, Victorians were hearing things. John Picker draws upon literary and scientific works to recapture the Victorian sense of aural discovery.


Victorian Soundscapes

Victorian Soundscapes

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  • Author: John M. Picker
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN: 0198034660
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 232

Far from the hushed restraint we associate with the Victorians, their world pulsated with sound. This book shows how, in more ways than one, Victorians were hearing things. The representations close listeners left of their soundscapes offered new meanings for silence, music, noise, voice, and echo that constitute an important part of the Victorian legacy to us today. In chronicling the shift from Romantic to modern configurations of sound and voice, Picker draws upon literary and scientific works to recapture the sense of aural discovery figures such as Babbage, Helmholtz, Freud, Bell, and Edison shared with the likes of Dickens, George Eliot, Tennyson, Stoker, and Conrad.


Sound, Sin, and Conversion in Victorian England

Sound, Sin, and Conversion in Victorian England

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  • Author: Julia Grella O'Connell
  • Publisher: Routledge
  • ISBN: 1317091531
  • Category : Music
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 285

The plight of the fallen woman is one of the salient themes of nineteenth-century art and literature; indeed, the ubiquity of the trope galvanized the Victorian conscience and acted as a spur to social reform. In some notable examples, Julia Grella O’Connell argues, the iconography of the Victorian fallen woman was associated with music, reviving an ancient tradition conflating the practice of music with sin and the abandonment of music with holiness. The prominence of music symbolism in the socially-committed, quasi-religious paintings of the Pre-Raphaelites and their circle, and in the Catholic-Wagnerian novels of George Moore, gives evidence of the survival of a pictorial language linking music with sin and conversion, and shows, even more remarkably, that this language translated fairly easily into the cultural lexicon of Victorian Britain. Drawing upon music iconography, art history, patristic theology, and sensory theory, Grella O’Connell investigates female fallenness and its implications against the backdrop of the social and religious turbulence of the mid-nineteenth century.


Sound and Literature

Sound and Literature

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  • Author: Anna Snaith
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN: 1108809200
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 750

What does it mean to write in and about sound? How can literature, seemingly a silent, visual medium, be sound-bearing? This volume considers these questions by attending to the energy generated by the sonic in literary studies from the late nineteenth century to the present. Sound, whether understood as noise, music, rhythm, voice or vibration, has long shaped literary cultures and their scholarship. In original chapters written by leading scholars in the field, this book tunes in to the literary text as a site of vocalisation, rhythmics and dissonance, as well as an archive of soundscapes, modes of listening, and sound technologies. Sound and Literature is unique for the breadth and plurality of its approach, and for its interrogation and methodological mapping of the field of literary sound studies.


Navigating Urban Soundscapes

Navigating Urban Soundscapes

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  • Author: Annika Eisenberg
  • Publisher: Springer Nature
  • ISBN: 3031167341
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 253

Navigating Urban Soundscapes: Dublin and Los Angeles in Fiction offers an innovative analytical framework to explore sound in different media and across two distinct urban soundscapes. Studying a wide range of novels, films, and radio dramas, using Dublin and Los Angeles as case studies, Annika Eisenberg asks how sounds are aestheticised to signify urban space in fiction, and how sounds allow such fictional urban spaces to be navigated, both by auscultators, the characters listening within a work of fiction, and by auditeurs, the implied audience of a fictional work. Eisenberg argues that the concept of “urban sound” is a cultural and aesthetic construct, and in doing so, she shows why aesthetics needs to be front and center in sound studies.


Sounds of Modern History

Sounds of Modern History

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  • Author: Daniel Morat
  • Publisher: Berghahn Books
  • ISBN: 1782384227
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 352

Long ignored by scholars in the humanities, sound has just begun to take its place as an important object of study in the last few years. Since the late 19th century, there has been a paradigmatic shift in auditory cultures and practices in European societies. This change was brought about by modern phenomena such as urbanization, industrialization and mechanization, the rise of modern sciences, and of course the emergence of new sound recording and transmission media. This book contributes to our understanding of modern European history through the lens of sound by examining diverse subjects such as performed and recorded music, auditory technologies like the telephone and stethoscope, and the ambient noise of the city.


Literature and the Senses

Literature and the Senses

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  • Author: Annette Kern-Stähler
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN: 019265747X
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 540

This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read at Oxford Academic and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations. Literature and the Senses critically probes the role of literature in capturing and scrutinizing sensory perception. Organized around the five traditional senses, followed by a section on multisensoriality, the collection facilitates a dialogue between scholars working on literature written from the Middle Ages to the present day. The contributors engage with a variety of theorists from Maurice Merleau-Ponty to Michel Serres to Jean-Luc Nancy to foreground the distinctive means by which literary texts engage with, open up, or make uncertain dominant views of the nature of perception. Considering the ways in which literary texts intersect with and diverge from scientific, epistemological, and philosophical perspectives, these essays explore a wide variety of literary moments of sensation including: the interspecies exchange of a look between a swan and a young Indigenous Australian girl; the sound of bees as captured in an early modern poem; the noxious smell of the 'Great Stink' that recurs in the Victorian novel; the taste of an eggplant registered in a poetic performance; tactile gestures in medieval romance; and the representation of a world in which the interdependence of human beings with the purple hibiscus plant is experienced through all five senses. The collection builds upon and breaks new ground in the field of sensory studies, focusing on what makes literature especially suitable to engaging with, contributing to, and challenging our perennial understandings of, the senses.


Science and Sound in Nineteenth-Century Britain

Science and Sound in Nineteenth-Century Britain

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  • Author: Edward J. Gillin
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis
  • ISBN: 1003805159
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 400

Sound and Science in Nineteenth-Century Britain is a four-volume set of primary sources which seeks to define our historical understanding of the relationship between British scientific knowledge and sound between 1815 and 1900. In the context of rapid urbanization and industrialization, as well as a growing overseas empire, Britain was home to a rich scientific culture in which the ear was as valuable an organ as the eye for examining nature. Experiments on how sound behaved informed new understandings of how a diverse array of natural phenomena operated, notably those of heat, light, and electro-magnetism. In nineteenth-century Britain, sound was not just a phenomenon to be studied, but central to the practice of science itself and broader understandings over nature and the universe. This collection, accompanied by extensive editorial commentary, will be of great interest to students and scholars of the History of Science.


Words and Notes in the Long Nineteenth Century

Words and Notes in the Long Nineteenth Century

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  • Author: Phyllis Weliver
  • Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
  • ISBN: 1843838117
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 270

A new wave of scholarship inspired by the ways the writers and musicians of the long nineteenth century themselves approached the relationship between music and words.


Re-Inventing the Postcolonial (in the) Metropolis

Re-Inventing the Postcolonial (in the) Metropolis

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  • Author: Cecile Sandten
  • Publisher: BRILL
  • ISBN: 9004328769
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 462

The volume Re-Inventing the Postcolonial (in the) Metropolis offers a wide-ranging collection of interdisciplinary essays by international scholars that address the postcolonial urban imaginary across five continents.