Voice Machines: The Castrato, the Cat Piano, and Other Strange Sounds

Author:   Bonnie Gordon
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Edition:   1
ISBN:  

9780226825144


Pages:   432
Publication Date:   31 May 2023
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Voice Machines: The Castrato, the Cat Piano, and Other Strange Sounds


Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Bonnie Gordon
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
Edition:   1
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.708kg
ISBN:  

9780226825144


ISBN 10:   0226825140
Pages:   432
Publication Date:   31 May 2023
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

"“Every so often a book appears after decades of historical spadework and deep thinking. Voice Machines is that book. Gordon’s vivid imagination and her analytical skill at suturing the smallest details to the largest conceptual understandings gleam on every page. With bracing lucidity, she builds her histories brick by brick from long-lost archives while also intuiting powerful meanings from present-day politics and artefacts. That double motion enables her canny reflections on voice, body, technology, race, the machinic, the postcolonial, and the posthuman to lead to a reimagining of castrato history. The upshot is something of a miracle. Voice Machines gives us a radically new argument, delivered with estimable intellectual power, wit, and verve, about the stakes of musical bodies as machinic assemblages.” * Martha Feldman, author of 'The Castrato: Reflections on Natures and Kinds' * “Voice Machines is a terrific book. Gordon doesn’t hold back, using the figure of the castrato to rethink the history of sound reproduction, organology tout court, the naive claims of sound studies and posthumanism, histories of the South, conceits of sex, and what it means to be human. The history of the machine, like the history of the human, is complex. And it is this complexity, as much as the complexity of the sound world of early modern Europe, that jostles for our attention on every page. An epistemological pickle, the castrato was also a figure who, perfected through surgery, enhanced sensory knowledge and extended physical nature by, for example, transubstantiating matters like air or breath into others, like voice. The sound of that voice becomes newly visceral and material in these pages.” * J. Q. Davies, author of 'Creatures of the Air: Music, Atlantic Spirits, Breath, 1817–1913' * ""The question of the morality of alterations to the body concerning sex and gender is once again at the forefront of right-wing political organizing. Gordon is undistracted by the transphobic explosion in contemporary politics, confining herself to the merest gestures toward the Supreme Court and other implications for the present day—she always centers the music. And yet, her argument is undeniably topical: Voice Machines insists that individual people with bodies relate and respond to the creative cultures around them, as well as to each other, ungovernably. Resisting a closure that would be false, she lets the reader hear the harmony and name it for themselves."" -- Jo Livingstone * 4Columns * ""Gordon explores the castrato as a cultural phenomenon and a critical mode of inquiry into the technological relationships that have existed between humans, machines, sounds, and instruments, from early modern to contemporary times. . . [A] gorgeously sweeping, multidisciplinary book that is equal parts historical and visionary."" -- Sarah Lawson * C-VILLE Weekly *"


Every so often a book appears after decades of historical spadework and deep thinking. Voice Machines is that book. Gordon's vivid imagination and her analytical skill at suturing the smallest details to the largest conceptual understandings gleam on every page. With bracing lucidity, she builds her histories brick by brick from long-lost archives while also intuiting powerful meanings from present-day politics and artefacts. That double motion enables her canny reflections on voice, body, technology, race, the machinic, the postcolonial, and the posthuman to lead to a reimagining of castrato history. The upshot is something of a miracle. Voice Machines gives us a radically new argument, delivered with estimable intellectual power, wit, and verve, about the stakes of musical bodies as machinic assemblages. * Martha Feldman, author of 'The Castrato: Reflections on Natures and Kinds' *


"“Every so often a book appears after decades of historical spadework and deep thinking. Voice Machines is that book. Gordon’s vivid imagination and her analytical skill at suturing the smallest details to the largest conceptual understandings gleam on every page. With bracing lucidity, she builds her histories brick by brick from long-lost archives while also intuiting powerful meanings from present-day politics and artefacts. That double motion enables her canny reflections on voice, body, technology, race, the machinic, the postcolonial, and the posthuman to lead to a reimagining of castrato history. The upshot is something of a miracle. Voice Machines gives us a radically new argument, delivered with estimable intellectual power, wit, and verve, about the stakes of musical bodies as machinic assemblages.” * Martha Feldman, author of 'The Castrato: Reflections on Natures and Kinds' * “Voice Machines is a terrific book. Gordon doesn’t hold back, using the figure of the castrato to rethink the history of sound reproduction, organology tout court, the naive claims of sound studies and posthumanism, histories of the South, conceits of sex, and what it means to be human. The history of the machine, like the history of the human, is complex. And it is this complexity, as much as the complexity of the sound world of early modern Europe, that jostles for our attention on every page. An epistemological pickle, the castrato was also a figure who, perfected through surgery, enhanced sensory knowledge and extended physical nature by, for example, transubstantiating matters like air or breath into others, like voice. The sound of that voice becomes newly visceral and material in these pages.” * J. Q. Davies, author of 'Creatures of the Air: Music, Atlantic Spirits, Breath, 1817–1913' * ""The question of the morality of alterations to the body concerning sex and gender is once again at the forefront of right-wing political organizing. Gordon is undistracted by the transphobic explosion in contemporary politics, confining herself to the merest gestures toward the Supreme Court and other implications for the present day—she always centers the music. And yet, her argument is undeniably topical: Voice Machines insists that individual people with bodies relate and respond to the creative cultures around them, as well as to each other, ungovernably. Resisting a closure that would be false, she lets the reader hear the harmony and name it for themselves."" -- Jo Livingstone * 4Columns * ""Gordon explores the castrato as a cultural phenomenon and a critical mode of inquiry into the technological relationships that have existed between humans, machines, sounds, and instruments, from early modern to contemporary times. . . [A] gorgeously sweeping, multidisciplinary book that is equal parts historical and visionary."" * C-VILLE Weekly *"


Every so often a book appears after decades of historical spadework and deep thinking. Voice Machines is that book. Gordon's vivid imagination and her analytical skill at suturing the smallest details to the largest conceptual understandings gleam on every page. With bracing lucidity, she builds her histories brick by brick from long-lost archives while also intuiting powerful meanings from present-day politics and artefacts. That double motion enables her canny reflections on voice, body, technology, race, the machinic, the postcolonial, and the posthuman to lead to a reimagining of castrato history. The upshot is something of a miracle. Voice Machines gives us a radically new argument, delivered with estimable intellectual power, wit, and verve, about the stakes of musical bodies as machinic assemblages. * Martha Feldman, author of 'The Castrato: Reflections on Natures and Kinds' * Voice Machines is a terrific book. Gordon doesn't hold back, using the figure of the castrato to rethink the history of sound reproduction, organology tout court, the naive claims of sound studies and posthumanism, histories of the South, conceits of sex, and what it means to be human. The history of the machine, like the history of the human, is complex. And it is this complexity, as much as the complexity of the sound world of early modern Europe, that jostles for our attention on every page. An epistemological pickle, the castrato was also a figure who, perfected through surgery, enhanced sensory knowledge and extended physical nature by, for example, transubstantiating matters like air or breath into others, like voice. The sound of that voice becomes newly visceral and material in these pages. * J. Q. Davies, author of 'Creatures of the Air: Music, Atlantic Spirits, Breath, 1817-1913' *


Author Information

A music historian who works across disciplines and creative practices, Bonnie Gordon is associate professor of music at the University of Virginia. She is a founding faculty member of the Equity Center at the University of Virginia and the new Sound Justice lab. She is the author of Monteverdi’s Unruly Women and coeditor of The Courtesan’s Arts. She plays jazz, rock, and classical viola.

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