Music, Discipline, and Arms in Early Modern France

Author:   Kate van Orden
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Edition:   2nd ed.
ISBN:  

9780226849768


Pages:   344
Publication Date:   01 September 2005
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained


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Music, Discipline, and Arms in Early Modern France


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Author:   Kate van Orden
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Edition:   2nd ed.
Dimensions:   Width: 1.80cm , Height: 0.30cm , Length: 2.50cm
Weight:   0.737kg
ISBN:  

9780226849768


ISBN 10:   0226849767
Pages:   344
Publication Date:   01 September 2005
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Stock Indefinitely
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained

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Reviews

Music refines manners, according to a French proverb. We know relatively little about the role music played in war, or about how closely it was connected to the military arts. However, music could not avoid being drawn into the training of the military and the pedagogical and civilizing demands of their profession. From troops to officers, from the general staff at court right up to the Royal Commander in Chief, music, musicians, singers, instrumentalists, and dancers actively participated in the machinery of modern civilization. Kate van Orden''s book is an innovative, original, and convincing addition to this field. It successfully leads the reader in a seductive and sensitive rediscovery of the noises and sounds of war in a bygone age. --Daniel Roche, College de France<br>


This is an important book for those concerned with the cultural relationships of music. A splendid, monumental work, based on exhaustive research across several disciplines and presented with style. It is very warmly recommended to readers interested in early modern history and culture. --Barbara Ravelhofer Kritikon Litterarum [This book] is a seminal, outstanding, and pluridisciplinary work, in which one can find an impressive wealth of ideas. Kate van Orden brilliantly uses and masters a large array of manuscripts and printed materials . . . and brings life to a complex period of French history. The result is a seductive and very well-written book that is difficult to lay down: once you have opened it, you cannot resist reading it without a pause from cover to cover. --Jean-Paul C. Montagnier Journal of the American Musicological Society Van Orden draws upon an astonishingly rich ar--Richard Freeman Early Music given to a musicological book of exceptional merit by a scholar in the early stages of his or her career. --Lewis Lockward award American Musicological Society [Van Orden''s] study engages the transition from Renaissance culture to that of subsequent early modern Europe; it is an impressive contribution both to the history of music and to European cultural history. --Ann E./i>--Ann E. Moyer Renaissance Quarterly This book is a brilliant, learned, and convincing advance in the understanding of Renaissance history and European culture in general. --Orest A. Ranum, The Johns Hopkins University This book takes music from its insulated aesthetic niche and positions it within a world in which sound served to reinforce power and to produce real effects on nobility and populace alike. A professional performer of early repertories, van Orden brings her experiences as a musician to bear on conversations usually dominated by political and military historians. Her innovative point of view will provide insights and new directions for a wide range of disciplines. --Susan McClary, University of California, Los Angeles [Van Orden's] study engages the transition from Renaissance culture to that of subsequent early modern Europe; it is an impressive contribution both to the history of music and to European cultural history. --Ann E. Moyer Renaissance Quarterly Kate van Orden convincingly demonstrates that music was critical in building a new social and political order after the Wars of Religion. . . She highlights the musical basis of a wide range of absolutist ideas and practices that have rarely (if ever) been considered from a musical perspective: the domestication of the French nobility, fencing/dueling, Jean Bodin's theory of absolutism, horseback riding, musketry, and pike drill. The book is well argued in limpid prose. The author is as much at ease in the world of the word as in that of music. . . . This is a very important work that opens an entirely new perspective on the making of French absolutism. --Rafe Blaufarb American Historical Review Van Orden draws upon an astonishingly rich array of primary materials. . . . [These documents] yield a compelling vision of the moralized aesthetics and aestheticized sense of virtue through which French elites fashioned themselves. . . . We cannot help but wonder at the immense range of sources assembled in this excellent book, and the patient learning with which they have been considered. --Richard Freeman Early Music Van Orden takes a very interesting and innovative approach. . . . She succeeds at bringing music into a realm hitherto dominated by political and military historians. She likewise manages to bring together the military and civilian words to show how the nobility . . . transformed itself into the epitome of refined behavior and in doing so contributed to the growth of the French monarchy. --Joan G. Gonzalez Comitatus This is a remarkable work, carefully argued and thoroughly documented, which can enrich our understanding of all aspects of the history and culture of early modern France. --Jane Couchman Sixteenth Century Journal Music refines manners, according to a French proverb. We know relatively little about the role music played in war, or about how closely it was connected to the military arts. However, music could not avoid being drawn into the training of the military and the pedagogical and civilizing demands of their profession. From troops to officers, from the general staff at court right up to the Royal Commander in Chief, music, musicians, singers, instrumentalists, and dancers actively participated in the machinery of modern civilization. Kate van Orden's book is an innovative, original, and convincing addition to this field. It successfully leads the reader in a seductive and sensitive rediscovery of the noises and sounds of war in a bygone age. --Daniel Roche, College de France Outstanding research and publications have taken place in the realm of French seventeenth- and eighteenth-century music for the last forty years or so, especially in the States. However, there are few individuals in the Anglo-Saxon intellectual community who possess the 'finesse d'esprit' so dear to the French and so necessary to communicate the essence of French cultural history to English and American readers. Kate van Orden is equally at home with France and its complicated social and cultural history. Her research is impressive, her writing is elegant, and her overview of music and the role it played in the aristocratic society of the 'Grand Siecle' is fresh and important. --William Christie, music director, Les Arts Florissants -This book is a brilliant, learned, and convincing advance in the understanding of Renaissance history and European culture in general.---Orest A. Ranum, The Johns Hopkins University -Music refines manners, according to a French proverb. We know relatively little about the role music played in war, or about how closely it was connected to the military arts. However, music could not avoid being drawn into the training of the military and the pedagogical and civilizing demands of their profession. From troops to officers, from the general staff at court right up to the Royal Commander in Chief, music, musicians, singers, instrumentalists, and dancers actively participated in the machinery of modern civilization. Kate van Orden's book is an innovative, original, and convincing addition to this field. It successfully leads the reader in a seductive and sensitive rediscovery of the noises and sounds of war in a bygone age.---Daniel Roche, College de France -Outstanding research and publications have taken place in the realm of French seventeenth- and eighteenth-century music for the last forty years or so, especially in the States. However, there are few individuals in the Anglo-Saxon intellectual community who possess the 'finesse d'esprit' so dear to the French and so necessary to communicate the essence of French cultural history to English and American readers. Kate van Orden is equally at home with France and its complicated social and cultural history. Her research is impressive, her writing is elegant, and her overview of music and the role it played in the aristocratic society of the 'Grand Siecle' is fresh and important.---William Christie, music director, Les Arts Florissants -This book takes music from its insulated aesthetic niche and positions it within a world in which sound served to reinforce power and to produce real effects on nobility and populace alike. A professional performer of early repertories, van Orden brings her experiences as a musician to bear on conversations usually dominated by political and military historians. Her innovative point of view will provide insights and new directions for a wide range of disciplines.---Susan McClary, University of California, Los Angeles -[Van Orden's] study engages the transition from Renaissance culture to that of subsequent early modern Europe; it is an impressive contribution both to the history of music and to European cultural history.---Ann E. Moyer -Renaissance Quarterly - given to -a musicological book of exceptional merit by a scholar in the early stages of his or her career.---Lewis Lockward award -American Musicological Society - -Kate van Orden convincingly demonstrates that music was critical in building a new social and political order after the Wars of Religion. . . She highlights the musical basis of a wide range of absolutist ideas and practices that have rarely (if ever) been considered from a musical perspective: the -domestication- of the French nobility, fencing/dueling, Jean Bodin's theory of absolutism, horseback riding, musketry, and pike drill. The book is well argued in limpid prose. The author is as much at ease in the world of the word as in that of music. . . . This is a very important work that opens an entirely new perspective on the making of French absolutism.---Rafe Blaufarb -American Historical Review - -Van Orden draws upon an astonishingly rich array of primary materials. . . . [These documents] yield a compelling vision of the moralized aesthetics and aestheticized sense of virtue through which French elites fashioned themselves. . . . We cannot help but wonder at the immense range of sources assembled in this excellent book, and the patient learning with which they have been considered.---Richard Freeman -Early Music - -Van Orden takes a very interesting and innovative approach. . . . She succeeds at bringing music into a realm hitherto dominated by political and military historians. She likewise manages to bring together the military and civilian words to show how the nobility . . . transformed itself into the epitome of refined behavior and in doing so contributed to the growth of the French monarchy.---Joan G. Gonzalez -Comitatus - -This is a remarkable work, carefully argued and thoroughly documented, which can enrich our understanding of all aspects of the history and culture of early modern France.---Jane Couchman -Sixteenth Century Journal - -[This book] is a seminal, outstanding, and pluridisciplinary work, in which one can find an impressive wealth of ideas. Kate van Orden brilliantly uses and masters a large array of manuscripts and printed materials . . . and brings life to a complex period of French history. The result is a seductive and very well-written book that is difficult to lay down: once you have opened it, you cannot resist reading it without a pause from cover to cover.---Jean-Paul C. Montagnier -Journal of the American Musicological Society - -A splendid, monumental work, based on exhaustive research across several disciplines and presented with style. It is very warmly recommended to readers interested in early modern history and culture.---Barbara Ravelhofer -Kritikon Litterarum - [Van Orden] brings a deeply learned, refreshing and original approach to the topic. The chapter on the political and religious uses of singing during the Wars of Religion is the highlight, brilliantly realised, thought-provoking, and worth the cover price alone. . . . She is never less than interesting and there are fascinating insights into all sorts of subjects, from dressage to drumming. --Stuart Carroll H-France Net -A very impressive and engaging work of scholarship. Music, Discipline, and Arms in Early Modern France argues that music played an important part in changing the character of the French ruling elite during the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. In particular, it contributed to the broad process of behavioral and cultural disciplining that the French nobility underwent during this time. Van Orden shows wide knowledge of sixteenth-century literature and a great understanding of the technical realities of early modern warfare.---Jonathan Dewald, State University of New York, Buffalo A very impressive and engaging work of scholarship. Music, Discipline, and Arms in Early Modern France argues that music played an important part in changing the character of the French ruling elite during the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. In particular, it contributed to the broad process of behavioral and cultural disciplining that the French nobility underwent during this time. Van Orden shows wide knowledge of sixteenth-century literature and a great understanding of the technical realities of early modern warfare. --Jonathan Dewald, State University of New York, Buffalo


[Van Orden] brings a deeply learned, refreshing and original approach to the topic. The chapter on the political and religious uses of singing during the Wars of Religion is the highlight, brilliantly realised, thought-provoking, and worth the cover price alone. . . . She is never less than interesting and there are fascinating insights into all sorts of subjects, from dressage to drumming. --Stuart Carroll H-France Net


Outstanding research and publications have taken place in the realm of French seventeenth- and eighteenth-century music for the last forty years or so, especially in the States. However, there are few individuals in the Anglo-Saxon intellectual community who possess the 'finesse d'esprit' so dear to the French and so necessary to communicate the essence of French cultural history to English and American readers.Kate van Orden is equally at home with France andits complicated social and cultural history. Her research is impressive, her writing is elegant, and her overview of music and the role it played in the aristocratic society of the 'Grand Siecle' is fresh and important. --William Christie, music director, Les Arts Florissants


This is a remarkable work, carefully argued and thoroughly documented, which can enrich our understanding of all aspects of the history and culture of early modern France. -- Jane Couchman Sixteenth Century Journal


"""[This book] is a seminal, outstanding, and pluridisciplinary work, in which one can find an impressive wealth of ideas. Kate van Orden brilliantly uses and masters a large array of manuscripts and printed materials . . . and brings life to a complex period of French history. The result is a seductive and very well-written book that is difficult to lay down: once you have opened it, you cannot resist reading it without a pause from cover to cover.""--Jean-Paul C. Montagnier ""Journal of the American Musicological Society"" ""[Van Orden's] study engages the transition from Renaissance culture to that of subsequent early modern Europe; it is an impressive contribution both to the history of music and to European cultural history.""--Ann E. Moyer ""Renaissance Quarterly"" ""A splendid, monumental work, based on exhaustive research across several disciplines and presented with style. It is very warmly recommended to readers interested in early modern history and culture.""--Barbara Ravelhofer ""Kritikon Litterarum"" ""Kate van Orden convincingly demonstrates that music was critical in building a new social and political order after the Wars of Religion. . . She highlights the musical basis of a wide range of absolutist ideas and practices that have rarely (if ever) been considered from a musical perspective: the ""domestication"" of the French nobility, fencing/dueling, Jean Bodin's theory of absolutism, horseback riding, musketry, and pike drill. The book is well argued in limpid prose. The author is as much at ease in the world of the word as in that of music. . . . This is a very important work that opens an entirely new perspective on the making of French absolutism.""--Rafe Blaufarb ""American Historical Review"" ""Music refines manners, according to a French proverb. We know relatively little about the role music played in war, or about how closely it was connected to the military arts. However, music could not avoid being drawn into the training of the military and the pedagogical and civilizing demands of their profession. From troops to officers, from the general staff at court right up to the Royal Commander in Chief, music, musicians, singers, instrumentalists, and dancers actively participated in the machinery of modern civilization. Kate van Orden's book is an innovative, original, and convincing addition to this field. It successfully leads the reader in a seductive and sensitive rediscovery of the noises and sounds of war in a bygone age.""--Daniel Roche, Collège de France ""Outstanding research and publications have taken place in the realm of French seventeenth- and eighteenth-century music for the last forty years or so, especially in the States. However, there are few individuals in the Anglo-Saxon intellectual community who possess the 'finesse d'esprit' so dear to the French and so necessary to communicate the essence of French cultural history to English and American readers. Kate van Orden is equally at home with France and its complicated social and cultural history. Her research is impressive, her writing is elegant, and her overview of music and the role it played in the aristocratic society of the 'Grand Siècle' is fresh and important.""--William Christie, music director, Les Arts Florissants ""This book is a brilliant, learned, and convincing advance in the understanding of Renaissance history and European culture in general.""--Orest A. Ranum, The Johns Hopkins University ""This book takes music from its insulated aesthetic niche and positions it within a world in which sound served to reinforce power and to produce real effects on nobility and populace alike. A professional performer of early repertories, van Orden brings her experiences as a musician to bear on conversations usually dominated by political and military historians. Her innovative point of view will provide insights and new directions for a wide range of disciplines.""--Susan McClary, University of California, Los Angeles ""This is a remarkable work, carefully argued and thoroughly documented, which can enrich our understanding of all aspects of the history and culture of early modern France.""--Jane Couchman ""Sixteenth Century Journal"" ""This is an important book for those concerned with the cultural relationships of music.""-- ""Early Music Review"" ""Van Orden draws upon an astonishingly rich array of primary materials. . . . [These documents] yield a compelling vision of the moralized aesthetics and aestheticized sense of virtue through which French elites fashioned themselves. . . . We cannot help but wonder at the immense range of sources assembled in this excellent book, and the patient learning with which they have been considered.""--Richard Freeman ""Early Music"" ""Van Orden takes a very interesting and innovative approach. . . . She succeeds at bringing music into a realm hitherto dominated by political and military historians. She likewise manages to bring together the military and civilian words to show how the nobility . . . transformed itself into the epitome of refined behavior and in doing so contributed to the growth of the French monarchy.""--Joan G. Gonzalez ""Comitatus"" given to ""a musicological book of exceptional merit by a scholar in the early stages of his or her career.""--Lewis Lockward award ""American Musicological Society "" [Van Orden] brings a deeply learned, refreshing and original approach to the topic. The chapter on the political and religious uses of singing during the Wars of Religion is the highlight, brilliantly realised, thought-provoking, and worth the cover price alone. . . . She is never less than interesting and there are fascinating insights into all sorts of subjects, from dressage to drumming.""--Stuart Carroll ""H-France Net"" ""A very impressive and engaging work of scholarship. Music, Discipline, and Arms in Early Modern France argues that music played an important part in changing the character of the French ruling elite during the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. In particular, it contributed to the broad process of behavioral and cultural disciplining that the French nobility underwent during this time. Van Orden shows wide knowledge of sixteenth-century literature and a great understanding of the technical realities of early modern warfare.""--Jonathan Dewald, State University of New York, Buffalo"


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Kate van Orden is associate professor of music at the University of California, Berkeley and editor of Music and the Cultures of Print.

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