Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Sound and sense in British Romanticism / edited by James Grande, Carmel Raz.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Cambridge studies in RomanticismPublisher: Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2023Description: 1 online resource (xiv, 277 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781009277839 (ebook)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 780.941/09034 23/eng/20230131
LOC classification:
  • ML285.4 .S68 2023
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction / James Grande and Carmel Raz -- William Hogarth : Looking and Listening for a Painting / Lydia Goehr -- Collecting Ballads, Historicizing Sounds : Appropriating Scottish National Music in the Eighteenth Century / Maria Semi -- Realising The Enraged Musician / Oskar Cox Jensen -- 'A Strange Jingle of Sounds' : Scenes of Aural Recognition in Early Nineteenth-Century English Literature / Josephine McDonagh -- The Sound of News : Affective Rhythm, Rupture, and Nostalgia / William Tullett -- The Resounding Fame of Fingal's Cave / Jonathan Hicks -- Echoing Sounds : What Was Poetry for Gilbert White? / Courtney Weiss Smith -- Mary Somerville's Sound Accomplishments : Scientific Writing and the Sonorous Sublime / Katherine Fry -- Organizing Modernity : Henry Liston's Euharmonic Organ and Natural Tuning in Company India / Daniel Walden -- Stethoscopic Fantasies / Melissa Dickson.
Summary: A radical re-imagining of the relationship between sound and sense took place in Britain in the decades around 1800. This new approach reconfigured sound as central to understandings of space and temporality, from the diurnal rhythms of everyday life in the modern city to the 'deep time' of the natural world. At the same time, sound emerged as a frequently disruptive phenomenon, a philosophical and political problem, and a force with the power to overwhelm listeners. This is the first book devoted to the topic and brings together scholars from literary studies, musicology, history and philosophy through the interdisciplinary frameworks of sound studies and the history of the senses. The chapters pursue a wide range of subjects, from 'national airs' to the London stage, and from experiments in sound to new musical and scientific instruments. Collectively, they demonstrate how a focus on sound can enrich our understanding of Romantic-era culture.
List(s) this item appears in: e-Book / ebook
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
No physical items for this record

Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 30 Aug 2023).

Open Access. Unrestricted online access star

Introduction / James Grande and Carmel Raz -- William Hogarth : Looking and Listening for a Painting / Lydia Goehr -- Collecting Ballads, Historicizing Sounds : Appropriating Scottish National Music in the Eighteenth Century / Maria Semi -- Realising The Enraged Musician / Oskar Cox Jensen -- 'A Strange Jingle of Sounds' : Scenes of Aural Recognition in Early Nineteenth-Century English Literature / Josephine McDonagh -- The Sound of News : Affective Rhythm, Rupture, and Nostalgia / William Tullett -- The Resounding Fame of Fingal's Cave / Jonathan Hicks -- Echoing Sounds : What Was Poetry for Gilbert White? / Courtney Weiss Smith -- Mary Somerville's Sound Accomplishments : Scientific Writing and the Sonorous Sublime / Katherine Fry -- Organizing Modernity : Henry Liston's Euharmonic Organ and Natural Tuning in Company India / Daniel Walden -- Stethoscopic Fantasies / Melissa Dickson.

A radical re-imagining of the relationship between sound and sense took place in Britain in the decades around 1800. This new approach reconfigured sound as central to understandings of space and temporality, from the diurnal rhythms of everyday life in the modern city to the 'deep time' of the natural world. At the same time, sound emerged as a frequently disruptive phenomenon, a philosophical and political problem, and a force with the power to overwhelm listeners. This is the first book devoted to the topic and brings together scholars from literary studies, musicology, history and philosophy through the interdisciplinary frameworks of sound studies and the history of the senses. The chapters pursue a wide range of subjects, from 'national airs' to the London stage, and from experiments in sound to new musical and scientific instruments. Collectively, they demonstrate how a focus on sound can enrich our understanding of Romantic-era culture.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.

Universiti Islam Sultan Sharif Ali
Spg 347, Jalan Pasar Gadong, BE1310
Brunei Darussalam

+ 673 2462000 ext 603/604

library@unissa.edu.bn
norhasinah.moksin@unissa.edu.bn
syukriyyah.kahar@unissa.edu.bn

Library Operating Hours:

Gadong Campus School Terms:
Monday – Thursday & Saturday:
8.00 AM – 5.00 PM
Friday, Sunday & Public Holidays :
Closed

Revision & Exam Week:
Monday – Wednesday:
8.00 AM – 9.00 PM
(Unless Otherwise Stated)
Thursday & Saturday:
8.00 AM – 5.00 PM
Friday & Sunday :
8.00 AM – 12.00 PM & 1.30 PM – 5.00 PM
Public Holidays :
Closed

Mid / Inter-Semester Break / Long Vacation:
Monday – Thursday & Saturday:
8.00 AM – 12.15 PM & 1.30 PM – 4.30 PM
Friday, Sunday & Public Holidays :
Closed

Sinaut Campus

School Terms:
Monday – Thursday & Saturday:
8.00 AM – 4.30 PM
Friday, Sunday & Public Holidays :
Closed

Revision & Exam Week:
Monday – Thursday & Saturday:
8.00 AM – 4.30 PM
Friday, Sunday & Public Holidays :
Closed

Mid / Inter-Semester Break / Long Vacation:
Monday – Thursday & Saturday:
8.00 AM – 12.15 PM & 1.30 PM – 4.30 PM
Friday, Sunday &
Public Holidays :
Closed

Flag Counter

© All Right Reserved 2023. Universiti Islam Sultan Sharif Ali

Administered and upheld by
 Rayyan Secutech