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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Dr David Deutsch (University of Alabama, USA)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.390kg ISBN: 9781350028463ISBN 10: 1350028460 Pages: 272 Publication Date: 23 March 2017 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsIntroduction: Approaches to Classical Music in British Literature, 1870-1945: Theory and Practice 1. The Liberalization of Music in Aesthetic Literature: Pater and Oxford 2. Modernism's Distinctive Musical Rhetoric: Eliot, Huxley, and Woolf 3. The Musical Refinement of the Lower-Middle and Working Classes: Bennett, Lawrence, and their Contemporaries 4. Distinguishing a Musical Homoeroticism: Pater, Forster, and Their Aesthetic Descendants 5. Classical Music, Cosmopolitanism, and War: From Authors to Audiences Conclusion: A Literary Coda: Classical Music in British Literature Works Cited IndexReviews[A] deeply admirable study. Times Literary Supplement Extremely stimulating and well-informed ... [This] book offers a wealth of information and astute analyses on a too-rarely-tackled subject that gives a fascinating insight into the importance of musical issues in both literature and society. Cercles Jazz is the musical style most often associated with modernism, but Deutsch (Univ. of Alabama) demonstrates that the roots of modernism are surely planted and bloom in classical music. Using the lens of New Historicism, the author examines music as an aesthetic trope in modernist literature to emphasize social reform and changing attitudes about sex, class, and gender. What he reveals demonstrates the reverberations of the new emphasis on the respectability of music education and the increased ability for all to attend musical performances. In the first chapter, Deutsch focuses on Walter Pater and the Oxbridge set. In the remaining four chapters, he considers Eliot's, Huxley's, and Woolf's use of musical allusion as a method of class critique; music education and the lower classes as seen through the work of Bennett, Burke, and Lawrence; classical music and tolerance of same-sex relationships; and the penetration of cosmopolitan ideas via the acceptance of European classical music. Proving that in this body of literature, music is integral rather than ancillary, Deutsch's volume merits serious attention. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty. -- V. A. Murrenus Pilmaier, University of Wisconsin-Sheboygan CHOICE David Deutsch's British Literature and Classical Music contributes valuably to a burgeoning conversation about the relationship between literature and music in the early twentieth century. ...his book is an important resource, built on an often-surprising archive. -- Josh Epstein Journal of British Studies [A] deeply admirable study. Times Literary Supplement Extremely stimulating and well-informed ... [This] book offers a wealth of information and astute analyses on a too-rarely-tackled subject that gives a fascinating insight into the importance of musical issues in both literature and society. Cercles Jazz is the musical style most often associated with modernism, but Deutsch (Univ. of Alabama) demonstrates that the roots of modernism are surely planted and bloom in classical music. Using the lens of New Historicism, the author examines music as an aesthetic trope in modernist literature to emphasize social reform and changing attitudes about sex, class, and gender. What he reveals demonstrates the reverberations of the new emphasis on the respectability of music education and the increased ability for all to attend musical performances. In the first chapter, Deutsch focuses on Walter Pater and the Oxbridge set. In the remaining four chapters, he considers Eliot's, Huxley's, and Woolf's use of musical allusion as a method of class critique; music education and the lower classes as seen through the work of Bennett, Burke, and Lawrence; classical music and tolerance of same-sex relationships; and the penetration of cosmopolitan ideas via the acceptance of European classical music. Proving that in this body of literature, music is integral rather than ancillary, Deutsch's volume merits serious attention. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty. -- V. A. Murrenus Pilmaier, University of Wisconsin-Sheboygan CHOICE David Deutsch's British Literature and Classical Music contributes valuably to a burgeoning conversation about the relationship between literature and music in the early twentieth century. -- Josh Epstein Journal of British Studies Author InformationDavid Deutsch is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Alabama, USA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |