This essay considers how early modern constructions of the singing voice are embedded into a range of philosophical discourses that spread far wider than the usual concerns of music scholarship. Taking as a case study, Battista Guarini's poem 'Mentre vaga Angioletta' (1581), it investigates of some of the broader concepts, both philosophical and ‘scientific’, which lie behind the poem’s engagement with the operation of a particular singing voice, and its effects on the body of the one who listens. It provides a model for fresh ways of considering a fundamental human phenomenon, that is important to comprehending early modern consciousness
Singing the Body Electric explores the relationship between the human voice and technology, offering...
Can Thomas Bernhard’s prose be considered a contribution to the philosophy of the subject? In this t...
This paper introduces my PhD research on the relationship which vocalists have with their voice. The...
This multidisciplinary dissertation explores theories of vocality in modern and early modern sources...
The capacity for the human voice to express a speaker's desires and shape a listener's will is a con...
What did it mean to raise one\u27s voice in Renaissance England? This dissertation concerns sixteent...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. This quote always struck me very p...
Writers from diverse disciplines have rhapsodised over the impact of the operatic voice on the liste...
This article explores how singing became “Wagnerian” after Wagner’s death in 1883. Common perception...
none1noAny discussion about the voices of singers active before the invention of the phonographic re...
It has acquired the status of a myth: how Italy, land of song, in a process beginning sometime in th...
This dissertation explores the relationship of the act of singing to being a human in the lyric poet...
When George Du Maurier’s infamous mesmerist Svengali performs on his elastic penny whistle, the inst...
This dissertation examines the philosophical meditations behind a particular use of the voice in con...
This dissertation traces the emergence in late eighteenth-century Italy of an ideological connection...
Singing the Body Electric explores the relationship between the human voice and technology, offering...
Can Thomas Bernhard’s prose be considered a contribution to the philosophy of the subject? In this t...
This paper introduces my PhD research on the relationship which vocalists have with their voice. The...
This multidisciplinary dissertation explores theories of vocality in modern and early modern sources...
The capacity for the human voice to express a speaker's desires and shape a listener's will is a con...
What did it mean to raise one\u27s voice in Renaissance England? This dissertation concerns sixteent...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the essay\u27s first paragraph. This quote always struck me very p...
Writers from diverse disciplines have rhapsodised over the impact of the operatic voice on the liste...
This article explores how singing became “Wagnerian” after Wagner’s death in 1883. Common perception...
none1noAny discussion about the voices of singers active before the invention of the phonographic re...
It has acquired the status of a myth: how Italy, land of song, in a process beginning sometime in th...
This dissertation explores the relationship of the act of singing to being a human in the lyric poet...
When George Du Maurier’s infamous mesmerist Svengali performs on his elastic penny whistle, the inst...
This dissertation examines the philosophical meditations behind a particular use of the voice in con...
This dissertation traces the emergence in late eighteenth-century Italy of an ideological connection...
Singing the Body Electric explores the relationship between the human voice and technology, offering...
Can Thomas Bernhard’s prose be considered a contribution to the philosophy of the subject? In this t...
This paper introduces my PhD research on the relationship which vocalists have with their voice. The...