1st Edition

Sounding the Virtual: Gilles Deleuze and the Theory and Philosophy of Music

Edited By Nick Nesbitt, Brian Hulse Copyright 2010
    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    312 Pages
    by Routledge

    It is the contention of the editors and contributors of this volume that the work carried out by Gilles Deleuze, where rigorously applied, has the potential to cut through much of the intellectual sedimentation that has settled in the fields of music studies. Deleuze is a vigorous critic of the Western intellectual tradition, calling for a 'philosophy of difference', and, despite its ambitions, he is convinced that Western philosophy fails to truly grasp (or think) difference as such. It is argued that longstanding methods of conceptualizing music are vulnerable to Deleuze's critique. But, as Deleuze himself stresses, more important than merely critiquing established paradigms is developing ways to overcome them, and by using Deleuze's own concepts this collection aims to explore that possibility.

    1: The Image of Thought and Ideas of Music; 2: Thinking Musical Difference: Music Theory as Minor Science *; 3: A Deleuzian Noise/Excavating the Body of Abstract Sound; 4: The Sound of Repeating Life: Ethics and Metaphysics in Deleuze's Philosophy of Music; 5: Enforced Deterritorialization, or the Trouble with Musical Politics 1; 6: Gilles Deleuze and the Musical Spinoza; 7: Intensity, Music, and Heterogenesis in Deleuze *; 8: Critique and Clinique: From Sounding Bodies to the Musical Event; 9: Logic of Edge: Wolfgang Rihm's Am Horizont; 10: Music and the Difference in Becoming; 11: Transformation and Becoming Other in the Music and Poetics of Luciano Berio; 12: Line, Surface, Speed: Nomadic Features of Melody

    Biography

    Brian Hulse, College of William and Mary, USA and Nick Nesbitt, Princeton University, USA

    ''... a groundbreaking and exceptionally thought-provoking collection with potential for longstanding and pervasive influence across disciplines, institutions and specializations.' Notes