The lyre of Orpheus : popular music, the sacred, and the profane / Christopher Partridge.
Material type:
TextPublisher: New York : Oxford University Press, 2014Description: ix, 356 pages ; 25 cmContent type: - text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780199751402
- 0199751404
- 9780199751396
- 0199751390
- ML 3470 .P37 2014
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book
|
Storms Research Center Main Collection | ML 3470 .P37 2014 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 98651320 |
Browsing Storms Research Center shelves,Shelving location: Main Collection Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
| ML 3470 .B444 2015 Unlocking creativity : a producer's guide to making music and art / | ML 3470 .D69 2005 Echo and reverb : fabricating space in popular music recording, 1900-1960 / | ML 3470 .M66 2005 The producer as composer : shaping the sounds of popular music / | ML 3470 .P37 2014 The lyre of Orpheus : popular music, the sacred, and the profane / | ML 3470 .S32 2011 Bytes and backbeats : repurposing music in the digital age / | ML 3470 .S54 2013 Understanding popular music culture / | ML 3477 .B39 1994 Hole in our soul : the loss of beauty and meaning in American popular music / |
Includes bibliographical references ( pages 291-324), discography (pages 325-335) and index.
Society and culture -- Emotion and meaning -- Transgression -- Romanticism -- Religion.
"The myth of Orpheus articulates what social theorists have known since Plato: music matters. It is uniquely able to move us, to guide the imagination, to evoke memories, and to create spaces within which meaning is made. Popular music occupies a place of particular social and cultural significance. Christopher Partridge explores this significance, analyzing its complex relationships with the values and norms, texts and discourses, rituals and symbols, and codes and narratives of modern Western cultures. He shows how popular music's power to move, to agitate, to control listeners, to shape their identities, and to structure their everyday lives is central to constructions of the sacred and the profane. In particular, he argues that popular music can be important 'edgework,' challenging dominant constructions of the sacred in modern societies. Drawing on a wide range of musicians and musical genres, as well as a number of theoretical approaches from critical musicology, cultural theory, sociology, theology, and the study of religion, The Lyre of Orpheus reveals the significance and the progressive potential of popular music."--Back cover.
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