MARC Record
Leader
001
17377
005
20250109133032.0
008
120201s1995 0 e
020
a| 9780520201163
041
a| eng
100
a| van den Toorn, Pieter
4| aut
9| 19032
245
a| Music, politics, and the academy
260
a| California
b| University of California Press
c| 1995
300
a| 238 pages
520
a| Advocates of "new musicology" claim that technical methods of music analysis are conservative, elitist, positivist, and emotionally arid. Pieter C. van den Toorn challenges those claims, asking why cultural, sociopolitical, or gender-studies approaches to music should be deemed more democratic or expressive of music's content or impact. Why should music analysis be thought incapable of serving larger aesthetic ends?Van den Toorn confronts Susan McClary, Leo Treitler, and Joseph Kerman in particular, arguing that hands-on music analysis can penetrate the complexity of music and speak to our experience of it. He criticizes new musicologists for retreating from issues of musical immediacy by focusing on cultural issues. In later chapters van den Toorn defends Schenkerian methods and demonstrates the usefulness of technical analysis in the appreciation of Beethoven, Debussy, Schoenberg, and Stravinsky.
942
c| BOO
2| ddc
920
a| boek
852
b| ORPH
c| ORPH
j| ORPH.AES VAND1
999
c| 17377
d| 17377