Music of the SirensLinda Austern, Inna Naroditskaya Whether referred to as mermaid, usalka, mami wata, or by some other name, and whether considered an imaginary being or merely a person with extraordinary abilities, the siren is the remarkable creature that has inspired music and its representations from ancient Greece to present-day Africa and Latin America. This book, co-edited by a historical musicologist and an ethnomusicologist, brings together leading scholars and some talented newcomers in classics, music, media studies, literature, and cultural studies to consider the siren and her multifaceted relationships to music across human time and geography. |
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... associated with the acoustic world and the powers of sound. To consider the sirens is thus largely to consider cultural constructs of performance and audition, diverse links between sounding body and hearing body. Narrative and absolute ...
... associated with the acoustic world and the powers of sound. To consider the sirens is thus largely to consider cultural constructs of performance and audition, diverse links between sounding body and hearing body. Narrative and absolute ...
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... associated with male privilege, hearing and vocality have been linked to women's interiority and invitation to comfort or seduction. The siren and her sisters may therefore be creatures whose vocal beauty obscures the perils and dangers ...
... associated with male privilege, hearing and vocality have been linked to women's interiority and invitation to comfort or seduction. The siren and her sisters may therefore be creatures whose vocal beauty obscures the perils and dangers ...
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... associated with men and with women, transgressing male territory to play instruments used exclusively in war or for masculine erotic or civic display, and rea≈rming femininity on others linked to women's spaces and pursuits. In the ...
... associated with men and with women, transgressing male territory to play instruments used exclusively in war or for masculine erotic or civic display, and rea≈rming femininity on others linked to women's spaces and pursuits. In the ...
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... associated with death,18 Sirens were frequently represented on graves, and as such constituted a poetic commonplace, being made into mourners themselves: ''Having lacerated ourselves in our weeping, we stand here on your tomb, stones in ...
... associated with death,18 Sirens were frequently represented on graves, and as such constituted a poetic commonplace, being made into mourners themselves: ''Having lacerated ourselves in our weeping, we stand here on your tomb, stones in ...
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... associated with the perhaps contemporary author Palaephatus, who gave a similar account of the Sirens.60 The story also found its way into Servius's commentary on Vergil, compiled soon after 400 ce: The Sirens, according to myth ...
... associated with the perhaps contemporary author Palaephatus, who gave a similar account of the Sirens.60 The story also found its way into Servius's commentary on Vergil, compiled soon after 400 ce: The Sirens, according to myth ...
Contents
Siren Traditions and Musical Creation in the CentralSouthern Andes | |
Heavenly and Earthly Sirens in Sixteenth and SeventeenthCentury Literary and Visual Culture | |
5 The Sirens the Epicurean Boat and the Poetry of Praise | |
Of Music Modernity and the Sirens | |
Water Power and Women | |
Loreley and Other Rhine Maidens | |
Music for Mami Wata and Other Water Spirits in Africa | |
Pop Sirens at the Twentyfirst Century | |
12 The Cocktail Siren in David Lynchs Blue Velvet | |
Bibliography | |
List of Contributors | |
Index | |
Back Cover | |
The Legend of a Greek Singer in a Turkish Tavern | |
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Common terms and phrases
African album Andean artists associated beautiful Benin City Blue Velvet body Cambridge Carey century Charango Christian classical context corporate siren creatures culture dance Dargomyzhsky’s David Lynch death di√erent diegetic Dorothy Dorothy’s e√ect early modern ears emblem emblem books embodied enchantment English European fantasy female feminine femme fatale fig figure film final finds first fish flowing flute gender Greek Hanım hear heroine Homer instruments Je√rey Kalankira Kniaz legend listen Little Mermaid London Loreley male Mami Wata Mami Wata/mami wata Mariah Mariah Carey melodies Mermaid meyhane Michel Chion Muses musicians myth o√ers Odysseus opera Oxford performance Physiologus poem poet poetry popular Pushkin reflects Renaissance rock Rusalka Russian scene seductive sexual significance singer singing Sirènes sirinus soul sound specific sweet symbol tion tradition trans Turkish Twain Ulysses University Press visual vocal voice Wagner wave music wayñu woman women York