Music and Metamorphosis in Graeco-Roman Thought

Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

Abstract

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.

Original languageEnglish
PublisherCambridge University Press
Number of pages310
ISBN (Electronic)9781316563069
ISBN (Print)9781107148741
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 3 Dec 2020

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