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Richard Elliott deposited “All You See Is Glory”: The Burden of Stardom and the Tragedy of Nina Simone in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoAlthough most often remembered as an icon of the civil rights era, Nina Simone enjoyed (and occasionally endured) a long career during which the bulk of the songs she performed dealt with the politics, pains and precariousness of the self. Her work—always suffused with longing, sensuality and the passion of being—took on, in her later career, wha…[Read more]
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Richard Elliott deposited “Time and Distance Are No Object” in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoWhether temporally or spatially focussed, nostalgia results from a division between what is longed for and the moment of longing. This article examines this “nostalgia gap” alongside the analogous gap found in representation. The relationship is highlighted via an analysis of “holiday records”, a genre of recordings that became prevalent in the…[Read more]
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Richard Elliott deposited A Blank Space Where You Write Your Name: Taylor Swift’s Early Late Voice in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoTaylor Swift’s songs invite listeners to connect art and life in the tradition, if not always the style, of the ‘confessional’ singer-songwriter. From an early age, Swift has written and sung about ‘big topics’ like time and experience with a remarkable sense of self awareness. Her songs hymn youthful experience to great effect through reference…[Read more]
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Ascensión Mazuela-Anguita deposited The soundscape of the ceremonies for the beatification of St Teresa of Ávila in the Crown of Aragon, 1614 in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 7 years, 11 months agoThe beatification of Saint Teresa of Ávila in October 1614 gave rise to widespread celebrations in many of the cities and towns of the Iberian Peninsula. Printed relaciones describing these celebrations, despite their limitations —in terms of political agenda, propaganda, rivalry and literary style— can nevertheless provide information about musi…[Read more]
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Jean Marie Carey deposited Mernet Larsen: Getting Measured 1957-2017 in the group
Feminist Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoA review of the 2017 retrospective of painter Mernet Larsen at the Tampa Museum of Art.
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Linda Shaver-Gleason deposited The Morality of Musical Men: From Victorian Propriety to the Era of #MeToo in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 8 years agoDuring an interview, Andris Nelsons, music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, stated unequivocally that sexual harassment was not a problem in the world of classical music because, “If [people] could realize how important [music and art] are…I believe they would become better human beings.” The interview was in response to the recent sprea…[Read more]
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Catherine Pope deposited “More like a woman stuck into boy’s clothes”: Sexual deviance in Florence Marryat’s Her Father’s Name in the group
Feminist Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoHer Father’s Name (1876) is one of Marryat’s most radical and intriguing novels, featuring Leona Lacoste, a cross-dressing heroine, and Lucilla Evans, a textbook hysteric who falls in love with her. For centuries, the diagnosis of ‘hysteria’ was conveniently applied to any woman who exhibited transgressive behaviour, whether it be through sexual…[Read more]
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Catherine Pope deposited Who Pays for the Butter? Florence Marryat and the Married Women’s Property Acts in the group
Feminist Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoWhereas many women writers were reticent on the issue of property, or vehemently opposed to improving the position of wives, Florence Marryat used her public platform to campaign for change. As such, her work forms an important contribution to our understanding of women and property in the nineteenth century. In this paper I discuss the ways in…[Read more]
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Catherine Pope deposited Woman Against Woman – Geraldine Jewsbury vs Florence Marryat in the group
Feminist Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoFlorence Marryat (1833-99) was a novelist, editor, playwright, spiritualist, singer and actress. She wrote nearly seventy novels during her varied career, most of which were dismissed by critics but loved by her reading public. Much of the opprobrium aimed at her originated from fellow women authors such as Eliza Lynn Linton and Marie Corelli, but…[Read more]
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Sophie Lewis deposited International Solidarity in reproductive justice: surrogacy and gender-inclusive polymaternalism in the group
Feminist Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoReproductive justice and gestational surrogacy are often implicitly treated as antonyms. Yet the former represents a theoretic approach that enables the long and racialised history of surrogacy (far from a new or ‘exceptional’ practice) to be appreciated as part of a struggle for ‘radical kinship’ and gender-inclusive polymaternalism. Recasti…[Read more]
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Sophie Lewis deposited Defending Intimacy against What? Limits of Antisurrogacy Feminisms in the group
Feminist Humanities on Humanities Commons 8 years agoAs surrogacy services expand globally, more and more nations are moving to ban the practice. Calls for its abolition couched in feminist terms returned to prominence in international public life in 2012. The resurgence follows a lapse since the heyday of the Feminist International Network of Resistance to Reproductive and Genetic Engineering…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson deposited PERFORMING THE PATRON: BETTY FREEMAN AND THE AVANT-GARDE in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 8 years agoLittle can be said about music during the last century without encountering the men and women who supported it financially. Pierre Bourdieu’s impression that the services rendered freely for the good of society reinforce a symbolic debt between giver and recipient complicates motivations behind patronage. Indeed, applying Bourdieu’s theory to alt…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson deposited “Unstuck in time”: Harry Partch’s Bilocated Life in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 8 years agoIn a letter dated to 1960, Harry Partch describes living two lives simultaneously—one in modern America and another in ancient Greece. Furthermore, throughout his life, Partch exhibited striking dualities in both his music and personal life. Partch’s affinity for Greek themes and modalities in his music and musical theory is well known, but les…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson deposited “That’s Where They Knew Me When”: Oklahoma Senior Follies and the Narrative of Decline in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 8 years agoAmerican musical theater occupies a unique space relative to other popular music genres. This is particularly true with regards to the ways aging performers are valued. Whereas aging or aged voices in popular music are often revered as “authentic,” aging musical theater performers face an industry largely uninvested in positive representations of…[Read more]
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Jake Johnson deposited Calling out the nameless: CocoRosie’s Posthuman sound world in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 8 years ago“To engage with CocoRosie requires absolute suspension of disbe- lief,” writes The Guardian. This has as much to do with their music as their appearance, for sisterly duo CocoRosie have embraced what they call a “posthuman kind of style” rooted in the dissolution of gender. In an effort to imagine a world beyond human constructions of gender,…[Read more]
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Richard Elliott deposited The Late Voice (Introduction) in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 8 years agoIntroduction to The Late Voice: Time, Age and Experience in Popular Music.
Popular music artists, as performers in the public eye, offer a privileged site for the witnessing and analysis of ageing and its mediation. The Late Voice undertakes such an analysis by considering issues of time, age, memory, innocence and experience in modern popular…[Read more]
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Reba Wissner deposited For Want of a Better Estimate, Let’s Call It the Year 2000: The Twilight Zone and the Aural Conception of a Dystopian Future in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 8 years agoThis paper examines the aural conceptions of futuristic dystopias in episodes of The Twilight Zone, focusing on one specific episode, season five’s “Number Twelve Looks Just Like You.” I examine how the music director of CBS conceived of the future, aurally representing these episodes as having an affinity with the premise of Brave New World by re…[Read more]
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Reba Wissner deposited I Am Big, It’s the Pictures That Got Small: Sound Technologies and Franz Waxman’s Scores for Sunset Boulevard (1950) and The Twilight Zone’s “The Sixteen Millimeter Shrine” (1959) in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 8 years agoFranz Waxman composed over 150 film scores, the most famous of which is Billy Wilder’s film noir Sunset Boulevard (1950). The film plot bears a striking resemblance to Rod Serling’s teleplay for The Twilight Zone, “The Sixteen-Millimeter Shrine” (1959). Waxman, composer of the film, was approached to compose a score for a television episode…[Read more]
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Katie Graber deposited Ramala PowerPoint in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month agoThis PowerPoint accompanies Ramala: An American “Indianist” Opera Musicological Lecture Concert (http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/M67K1J).
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Katie Graber deposited Ramala: An American “Indianist” Opera, Musicological Lecture Concert in the group
Music and Sound on Humanities Commons 8 years, 1 month agoOhio State University Opera & Lyric Theatre presents “Ramala”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N6HEzeWw9SI Wednesday, November 1, 2017 – 7:30pm Weigel Auditorium Charles Wakefield Cadman, Francis La Flesche, and Nelle Richmond Eberhart began collaborating on this opera in 1908, at that time titled Daoma (sometimes spelled Da O Ma). In the 1930s,…[Read more]
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