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E-grāmata: Four-Handed Monsters: Four-Hand Piano Playing and Nineteenth-Century Culture [Oxford Scholarship Online E-books]

(Assistant Professor of German, Stanford University, San Francisco, CA, USA)
  • Formāts: 256 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jul-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780199981779
  • Oxford Scholarship Online E-books
  • Cena pašlaik nav zināma
  • Formāts: 256 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jul-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780199981779
In the course of the nineteenth century, four-hand piano playing emerged across Europe as a popular pastime of the well-heeled classes and of those looking to join them. Nary a canonic work of classical music that was not set for piano duo, nary a house that could afford not to invest in them. Duets echoed from the student bedsit to Buckingham Palace, resounded in schools and in hundreds of thousands of bourgeois parlors. Like no other musical phenomenon, it could cross national, social, and economic boundaries, bringing together poor students with the daughters of the bourgeoisie, crowned heads with penniless virtuosi, and the nineteenth century often regarded it with extreme suspicion for that very reason.

Four-hand piano playing was often understood as a socially acceptable way of flirting, a flurry of hands that made touching, often of men and women, not just acceptable but necessary. But it also became something far more serious than that, a central institution of the home, mediating between inside and outside, family and society, labor and leisure, nature and nurture. And writers, composers, musicians, philosophers, journalists, pamphleteers and painters took note: in the art, literature, and philosophy of the age, four-hand playing emerged as a common motif, something that allowed them to interrogate the very nature of the self, the family, the community and the state. In the four hands rushing up and down the same keyboard the nineteenth century espied, or thought to espy, an astonishing array of things. Four-Handed Monsters tells not only the story of that practice, but also the story of the astonishing array of things the nineteenth century read into it.
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction 1(23)
1 The Sonic Hearth and the "Piano Plague"
24(31)
2 Four-Hand Piano Playing between Parlor Music and the Culture Industry
55(27)
3 "At Best an Intruder, at Worst a Voyeur": Four-Hand Piano Playing and the Family Unit
82(23)
4 Four-Handed Monsters
105(30)
5 The Semantics of the Hand
135(28)
6 Fordist Chords
163(23)
7 Musical Platonism: Four-Hand Playing Among the Philosophers
186(26)
8 Kakanian Variations: Four Hands and the Passing of-the Nineteenth Century
212(29)
Index 241
Adrian Daub is Associate Professor of German Studies at Stanford University, where he works on the intersection between literature, music and philosophy in the long nineteenth century. He is the author of Uncivil Unions: The Metaphysics of Marriage in German Idealism and Romanticism (2012) and Tristan's Shadow: Sexuality and the Total Work of Art after Wagner (2013).