Skip to product information
1 of 1

Sovereign Feminine

Regular price $85.00
Regular price $85.00 Sale price $85.00
Sold out
In the German states in the late eighteenth century, women flourished as musical performers and composers, their achievements measuring the progress of culture and society from barbarism to civili...
Read More
  • 09 May 2013
View Product Details
In the German states in the late eighteenth century, women flourished as musical performers and composers, their achievements measuring the progress of culture and society from barbarism to civilization. Female excellence, and related feminocentric values, were celebrated by forward-looking critics who argued for music as a fine art, a component of modern, polite, and commercial culture, rather than a symbol of institutional power. In the eyes of such critics, femininity—a newly emerging and primarily bourgeois ideal—linked women and music under the valorized signs of refinement, sensibility, virtue, patriotism, luxury, and, above all, beauty. This moment in musical history was eclipsed in the first decades of the nineteenth century, and ultimately erased from the music-historical record, by now familiar developments: the formation of musical canons, a musical history based on technical progress, the idea of masterworks, authorial autonomy, the musical sublime, and aggressively essentializing ideas about the relationship between sex, gender and art. In Sovereign Feminine, Matthew Head restores this earlier musical history and explores the role that women played in the development of classical music.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $85.00
Pages: 350
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 09 May 2013
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780520273849
Format: Hardcover
REVIEWS Icon
"A significant book, which usefully applies gender studies to a previously neglected period of music history."
Matthew Head is a Reader in Music at King’s College London. He is the author of Orientalism, Masquerade, and Mozart’s Turkish Music (2000).
List of Illustrations
Preface and Acknowledgments

Introduction: Fictions of Female Ascendance

1. Europe’s Living Muses: Women, Music, and Modernity in Burney’s History and Tours
2. “If the pretty little hand won’t stretch”: Music for the Fair Sex
3. Charlotte (“Minna”) Brandes and the Beautiful Dead
4. An Evening in Tiefurt: Corona Schröter’s Die Fischerin and Vegetable Genius
5. Sophie Westenholz and the Eclipse of the Female Sign
6. Beethoven Heroine: A Female Allegory of Music and Authorship in Egmont

Conclusion

Appendix: Johann Friedrich Reichardt, Two Prefaces to the Fair Sex
Notes
Bibliography
Index