
Debussy's Critics: Sound, Affect, and the Experience of Modernism explores the music of Claude Debussy and its early reception in light of the rise of the empirical human sciences in Western Europe around the turn of the twentieth century. In the midst of a sea change in conceptions of the human person, the critics who wrote about Debussy's music in the Parisian press-continually returning to this music's nebulous relationship to sensation and sensibilité-attempted to articulate a music aesthetic appropriate to the fully embodied, material self of psychological modernism. While scholarship on French music in this period has often emphasized its affinities with other art forms, such as Impressionist painting and Symbolist poetry, Debussy's Critics demonstrates that a preoccupation with the specifically sonic materiality of Debussy's music, informed by late nineteenth-century scientific discourses on affect, perception, and cognition, was central to this music's historical intervention. Foregrounding the dynamic exchange between sounds and ideas, this book reveals the disorienting and bewildering experience of listening to Debussy's music, which compelled its early audiences to reimagine the most fundamental premises of the European art-music tradition.
How did the intersection of empirical human sciences and early twentieth-century music criticism shape the reception of Claude Debussy's compositions? Alexandra Kieffer, a scholar of music history, examines the Parisian press's response to Debussy's work during a period of shifting psychological and scientific paradigms. She argues that critics interpreted Debussy's music not merely as an aesthetic parallel to Impressionist art, but as a direct engagement with the material, embodied experience of sound, perception, and affect.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and musicologists recognize this text as a significant contribution to the study of French modernism and the history of listening practices. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the depth of the archival research into period-specific scientific and aesthetic debates.
Page Count:
327
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190847263
ISBN-13:
9780190847265
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