The Conjectural Body

Gender, Race, and the Philosophy of Music

The Conjectural Body cover

The Conjectural Body

Gender, Race, and the Philosophy of Music

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Description

Grounded in continental philosophy, The Conjectural Body: Gender, Race, and the Philosophy of Music uses feminist, critical race, and postcolonial theories to examine music, race, and gender as discourses that emerge and evolve with one another.. In the first section, author Robin James asks why philosophers commonly use music to explain embodied social identity and inequality. She looks at late twentieth-century postcolonial theory, Rousseau's early musical writings, and Kristeva's reading of Mozart and Schoenberg to develop a theory of the "conjectural body," arguing that this is the notion of embodiment that informs Western conceptions of raced, gendered, and resonating bodies. The second section addresses the ways in which norms about human bodily difference-such as gender and race-continue to ground serious and popular hierarchies well after twentieth and twenty-first century art and philosophy have deconstructed this binary. Reading Adorno's work on popular music through Irigaray's critique of commodification, James establishes and explains the feminization of popular music. She then locates this notion of the feminized popular in Nietzsche, and argues that he critiques Wagner by making an argument for the positive aesthetic (and epistemological) value of feminized popular music, such as Bizet and Italian opera. Following from Nietzsche, she argues that feminists ought and need to take "the popular" seriously, both as a domain of artistic and scholarly inquiry as well as a site of legitimate activism. The book concludes with an analysis of philosophy's continued hostility toward feminism, real-life women, and popular culture. While the study of gender, race, and popular culture has become a fixture in many areas of the academy, philosophy and musicology continue to resist attempts to take these objects as objects of serious academic study.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction
Part 2 Part 1. Conjecture and Resonating Bodies
Chapter 3 Chapter 1. On Popular Music in Postcolonial Theory
Chapter 4 Chapter 2. Conjectural Histories, Conjectural Harmonies: On political and musical "nature" in Rousseau's early writings
Chapter 5 Chapter 3. Conjecture and the Impossible Opera: From the Thought Specular to the Society of the Spectacle
Part 6 Part 2. Fetishism, Abjection, and the Feminized Popular
Chapter 7 Chapter 4. "Smells Like Booty": Pop music and the logic of abjection
Chapter 8 Chapter 5. "What is it that my whole body really expects of music?": Nietzsche and the feminized popular
Chapter 9 Epilogue

Product details

Published Sep 14 2010
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 210
ISBN 9780739139028
Imprint Lexington Books
Dimensions 240 x 162 mm
Series Out Sources: Philosophy-Culture-Politics
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Robin James

Robin James is a popular music scholar and author…

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