This article attempts to show that the pastoral in music, presenting an ideal society, was part of the Utopian genre. The works played at the Académie Royale de Musique are placed in the context of 17th and 18th century agro-pastoral society, in order to show the implications of its topoi, representations of an ideal including references to the past, social criticism and the need to project oneself into the future. The naturally artistic shepherds, part of a closed world, figure an idyllic way of life and praise liberty in an egalitarian society. Their moral values, the source of their happiness, were opposed to the habits of the town and the court, shown as hypocritical and unjust. The subversive message was only limited by the need to inc...
Durosoir Georgie. Pastorales avec musique et pastorales en musique en France au milieu du XVIIe sièc...
Face à l’industrialisation de l’agriculture, le pastoralisme montagnard apparaît comme une activité ...
In The Elements of Criticism (1761), Lord Kames explains that the fine arts go 'hand in hand' and th...
This article attempts to show that the pastoral in music, presenting an ideal society, was part of t...
National audienceThis article tackles the question of the 'intime' by thinking about the modelling o...
How can we study a music which is not meant to be listened to ? This paper looks into the musical pr...
The Journal de Nîmes from 1785 to 1789 provides echoes of the musical life of an expanding industria...
The article explores the parallels drawn between the invention of music and the invention of societi...
International audiencePoetry is always “civic” to some extent, and cannot avoid the questions that e...
Dans un phénomène tout à fait analogue au cas pictural, la thématique de la vanité a pénétré le cham...
2012-08-01This paper examines the pastoral genre as represented in operatic works from the early 18t...
Au XVIIe siècle, le parallèle entre les arts s'inspire principalement de la conception aristotélicie...
In the margins of the illuminated manuscripts of the XIIIth and XlVth centuries, a loads of animals ...
Cet article prend pour exemple une société - les Masa du Tchad et du Cameroun -caractérisée par un p...
At the beginning of the eighteenth century, rough debates took place among English poets as to the r...
Durosoir Georgie. Pastorales avec musique et pastorales en musique en France au milieu du XVIIe sièc...
Face à l’industrialisation de l’agriculture, le pastoralisme montagnard apparaît comme une activité ...
In The Elements of Criticism (1761), Lord Kames explains that the fine arts go 'hand in hand' and th...
This article attempts to show that the pastoral in music, presenting an ideal society, was part of t...
National audienceThis article tackles the question of the 'intime' by thinking about the modelling o...
How can we study a music which is not meant to be listened to ? This paper looks into the musical pr...
The Journal de Nîmes from 1785 to 1789 provides echoes of the musical life of an expanding industria...
The article explores the parallels drawn between the invention of music and the invention of societi...
International audiencePoetry is always “civic” to some extent, and cannot avoid the questions that e...
Dans un phénomène tout à fait analogue au cas pictural, la thématique de la vanité a pénétré le cham...
2012-08-01This paper examines the pastoral genre as represented in operatic works from the early 18t...
Au XVIIe siècle, le parallèle entre les arts s'inspire principalement de la conception aristotélicie...
In the margins of the illuminated manuscripts of the XIIIth and XlVth centuries, a loads of animals ...
Cet article prend pour exemple une société - les Masa du Tchad et du Cameroun -caractérisée par un p...
At the beginning of the eighteenth century, rough debates took place among English poets as to the r...
Durosoir Georgie. Pastorales avec musique et pastorales en musique en France au milieu du XVIIe sièc...
Face à l’industrialisation de l’agriculture, le pastoralisme montagnard apparaît comme une activité ...
In The Elements of Criticism (1761), Lord Kames explains that the fine arts go 'hand in hand' and th...