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Virtuosity of the nineteenth centuryVirtuosity of the nineteenth century

Virtuosity of the nineteenth century1998

Susan Bernstein

About this book

Franz Liszt is the organizing figure in this detailed study of music in Heine and Baudelaire. The acclaimed virtuoso functions both as a metaphor for a musical mode of enunciation and as a historical referent. This dual status dramatizes the struggle at the heart of nineteenth-century aesthetics between poetic self-reference and realism's efforts to report the world accurately. The book's analyses of nineteenth-century theories of correspondence, along with the thematization of the "other arts," point to the limitations of analogy, the impossibility of a general theory of art, and a crisis of identity - that is, a shared non-identity - that can be the only common property among different discourses, genres, and media.

Details

First published
1998
OL Work ID
OL1832328W

Subjects

Virtuosity in musicKnowledgeMusic and literatureMusicMusic and languageHistoryVirtuosity in musical performanceHistory and criticismHeine, heinrich, 1797-1856Liszt, franz, 1811-1886Baudelaire, charles, 1821-1867

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