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The Many-Headed Muse
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 389

The Many-Headed Muse

This book examines Greek songs composed between 440 and 323 BC and argues for the vividness and diversity of lyric culture.

Music and Metamorphosis in Graeco-Roman Thought
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 291

Music and Metamorphosis in Graeco-Roman Thought

Where does music come from? What kind of agency does a song have? What is at the root of musical pleasure? Can music die? These are some of the questions the Greeks and the Romans asked about music, song, and the soundscape within which they lived, and that this book examines. Focusing on mythical narratives of metamorphosis, it investigates the aesthetic and ontological questions raised by fantastic stories of musical origins. Each chapter opens with an ancient text devoted to a musical metamorphosis (of a girl into a bird, a nymph into an echo, men into cicadas, etc.) and reads that text as a meditation on an aesthetic and ontological question, in dialogue with 'contemporary' debates – contemporary with debates in the Greco-Roman culture that gave rise to the story, and with modern debates in the posthumanities about what it means to be a human animal enmeshed in a musicking environment.

A Companion to Ancient Greek and Roman Music
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 564

A Companion to Ancient Greek and Roman Music

A COMPANION TO ANCIENT GREEK AND ROMAN MUSIC A comprehensive guide to music in Classical Antiquity and beyond Drawing on the latest research on the topic, A Companion to Ancient Greek and Roman Music provides a detailed overview of the most important issues raised by the study of ancient Greek and Roman music. An international panel of contributors, including leading experts as well as emerging voices in the field, examine the ancient 'Art of the Muses' from a wide range of methodological, theoretical, and practical perspectives. Written in an engaging and accessible style, this book explores the pervasive presence of the performing arts in ancient Greek and Roman culture—ranging from musi...

Frontiers of Pleasure
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 216

Frontiers of Pleasure

  • Categories: Art

Frontiers of Pleasure calls into question a number of influential modern notions regarding aesthetics by going back to the very beginnings of aesthetic thought in Greece and raising critical issues regarding conceptions of how one responds to the beautiful. Despite a recent rebirth of interest in aesthetics, extensive discussion of this key cluster of topics has been absent. Anatasia-Erasmia Peponi argues that although the Greek language had no formal term equivalent to the "aesthetic," the notion was deeply rooted in Greek thought. Her analysis centers on a dominant aspect of beauty - the aural - associated with a highly influential sector of culture that comprised both poetry and instrumen...

The Many-headed Muse
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 377

The Many-headed Muse

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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Stesichorus in Context
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 225

Stesichorus in Context

The first collection of essays, by leading scholars, on a major Greek poet whose works have only recently been recovered.

Sound and the Ancient Senses
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 322

Sound and the Ancient Senses

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2018-10-03
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  • Publisher: Routledge

Sound leaves no ruins and no residues, even though it is experienced constantly. It is ubiquitous but fleeting. Even silence has sound, even absence resonates. Sound and the Ancient Senses aims to hear the lost sounds of antiquity, from the sounds of the human body to those of the gods, from the bathhouse to the Forum, from the chirp of a cicada to the music of the spheres. Sound plays so great a role in shaping our environments as to make it a crucial sounding board for thinking about space and ecology, emotions and experience, mortality and the divine, orality and textuality, and the self and its connection to others. From antiquity to the present day, poets and philosophers have strained ...

Dissonance
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 231

Dissonance

In the four centuries leading up to the death of Euripides, Greek singers, poets, and theorists delved deeply into auditory experience. They charted its capacity to develop topologies distinct from those of the other senses; contemplated its use as a communicator of information; calculated its power to express and cause extreme emotion. They made sound too, artfully and self-consciously creating songs and poems that reveled in sonorousness. Dissonance reveals the commonalities between ancient Greek auditory art and the concerns of contemporary sound studies, avant-garde music, and aesthetics, making the argument that “classical” Greek song and drama were, in fact, an early European avant-garde, a proto-exploration of the aesthetics of noise. The book thus develops an alternative to that romantic ideal which sees antiquity as a frozen and silent world.

Hellenistic Poetry
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 601

Hellenistic Poetry

A major new collection of use to all students and scholars working on Hellenistic Greek poetry