Imagining Musical Pasts: The Queer Literary Musicology of Vernon Lee, Rosa Newmarch, and Edward Prime-Stevenson

Author:   Kristin M. Franseen
Publisher:   Clemson University Digital Press
ISBN:  

9781638040583


Pages:   280
Publication Date:   03 November 2023
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Our Price $257.40 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Imagining Musical Pasts: The Queer Literary Musicology of Vernon Lee, Rosa Newmarch, and Edward Prime-Stevenson


Add your own review!

Overview

Ebook available to libraries exclusively as part of the JSTOR Path to Open initiative. Imagining Musical Pasts explores the complicated archive of sources, interpretations, and people present in queer writings on opera and symphonic music from ca. 1880–1935. It focuses primarily on the work of three turn-of-the-twentieth-century music scholars—philosopher and horror writer Vernon Lee (pseud. Violet Paget), biographer and program note annotator Rosa Newmarch, and critic and amateur sexologist Edward Prime-Stevenson. Each of the three major sections of the book is organized according to the authorial personae each author adopted in their creative and scholarly work. These categories reflect the particular intellectual commitments of each figure: Lee’s fascination with the failure of written documentation to fully capture the “ghosts” of past musical experience, Newmarch’s reliance on documentary evidence to reveal some of her subject’s secrets and her stated discomfort with the role of the biographer, and Prime-Stevenson’s nostalgic use of repetition, revision, and dedication to “return” to the 1890s decades after the fact. By reframing these ways of knowing as central to each scholar’s individual approach to constructing and interpreting musical and sexual knowledge, the book draws attention to aspects of their work previously neglected or considered only in isolation. Identifying the coded references, careful nuances, and intentional and accidental gaps that make ambiguity an inherent feature of these sources requires an awareness of multiple approaches to music history beyond biography and historiography, intersecting as it does with literary scholarship, art history, the histories of science and medicine, and sound studies. This project proposes some ways in which the histories of sexuality and musicology might be more intertwined than commonly assumed.

Full Product Details

Author:   Kristin M. Franseen
Publisher:   Clemson University Digital Press
Imprint:   Clemson University Digital Press
ISBN:  

9781638040583


ISBN 10:   1638040583
Pages:   280
Publication Date:   03 November 2023
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Old Queer Musicology Part I: Vernon Lee’s Ghostly Musical Encounters Chapter 1: “The more or less remote Past”: Imagining Castrati and Overhearing the Eighteenth Century Chapter 2: “A gallery of dramatis personae with whom I often feel very intimate”: Musicological Authority and Homosociality in Music and its Lovers and “A Wicked Voice” Part II: Rosa Newmarch’s Musical Detective Work Chapter 3: “An autobiographical interest for which there is no real warranty”: Gossip, Evidence, and Speculation in Newmarch’s Tchaikovsky Scholarship Chapter 4: “Her own song to sing”: Friendship and Romantic Ambiguity in Mary Wakefield and the Sonnets Part III: Edward Prime-Stevenson’s Nostalgic Musical Time Travel Chapter 5: “The ultimate voices in a homosexual message by symphonic music”: The Intersexes and Long-Haired Iopas as Musicological Sexology Chapter 6: “Once, But Not Twice?”: Repertory and the Culmination of Nostalgic Wanderings Conclusions: Are Musicologists Human? Appendix 1: Vernon Lee, “English Questionnaire,” Music and its Lovers (1933) Appendix 2: Edward Prime-Stevenson’s Annotations and “Literary Agent’s Press-Circular” Long-Haired Iopas, Copy #77 Appendix 3: Dedicatees in Edward Prime-Stevenson, Long-Haired Iopas (1927)

Reviews

Author Information

Kristin M. Franseen is a FRQSC postdoctoral fellow at Concordia University, where she is also a research associate with the Simone de Beauvoir Institute. She received her PhD in musicology from McGill University in 2019. Articles stemming from her dissertation appear in Music & Letters, 19th-Century Music, and the Cahiers de la Société québécoise de recherche en musique. Her research focuses on the role of gossip, anecdote, and fiction in the history of musicology and composer biography. She is currently at work on two projects: (1) a critical look at music critic and amateur sexologist Edward Prime-Stevenson’s record collecting and self-publishing activities and (2) an examination of Antonio Salieri’s literary reception history.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

MRG2025CC

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List