Beyond representation: Music, language, and mental life

Beyond Representation: Music, Language, and Mental Life investigates how music, as a non-discursive expressive form, generates and expresses meaning. Music’s use in cultural ritual is explored through social anthropologist and ethnomusicologist John Blacking’s studies of the South African Venda peop...

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Main Author: Nixon, Luke
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://summit.sfu.ca/item/21536
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spelling ftsimonfu:oai:summit.sfu.ca:21536 2023-05-15T16:32:32+02:00 Beyond representation: Music, language, and mental life Nixon, Luke 2021-04-12 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/21536 unknown etd21384 http://summit.sfu.ca/item/21536 Graduating extended essay / Research project 2021 ftsimonfu 2022-04-07T18:44:10Z Beyond Representation: Music, Language, and Mental Life investigates how music, as a non-discursive expressive form, generates and expresses meaning. Music’s use in cultural ritual is explored through social anthropologist and ethnomusicologist John Blacking’s studies of the South African Venda people, as well as music theorist Teresa L. Reed’s work on religious practises found within the African American Pentecostal tradition. The Project shows that music necessarily and invaluably contributes to the efficacy of cultural rituals wherein the ritual participants express significant aspects of individual felt-experience. Additionally, these rituals strengthen cultural ties through social cohesion and solidarity. Myth and music are seen to possess similar shared expressive characteristics through poet and cultural historian Robert Bringhurst’s study of Indigenous Haida myth. This comparison is further examined through anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss on how both myth and music have historically expressed non-linear felt-senses of time. Susanne Langer’s Philosophy in a New Key: A Study in the Symbolism of Reason, Rite and Art shows how discursive language is fundamentally limited in its ability to express the contradictions, nuances, and ambiguities inherent to human feeling and experience. The project extends Langer’s argument that discursive language generates meaning incompatible with the rhythms and patterns of our feelings themselves, whereas music—non-discursively and non-representationally—is capable of articulating the qualities of our felt-experiences. In support of Langer, musical works by Nick Cave, Bob Dylan, John Coltrane, Stars of the Lid, William Basinski, and Leyland Kirby are discussed. Other/Unknown Material haida haida Summit - SFU Research Repository (Simon Fraser University) Strauss ENVELOPE(-73.182,-73.182,-71.649,-71.649)
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description Beyond Representation: Music, Language, and Mental Life investigates how music, as a non-discursive expressive form, generates and expresses meaning. Music’s use in cultural ritual is explored through social anthropologist and ethnomusicologist John Blacking’s studies of the South African Venda people, as well as music theorist Teresa L. Reed’s work on religious practises found within the African American Pentecostal tradition. The Project shows that music necessarily and invaluably contributes to the efficacy of cultural rituals wherein the ritual participants express significant aspects of individual felt-experience. Additionally, these rituals strengthen cultural ties through social cohesion and solidarity. Myth and music are seen to possess similar shared expressive characteristics through poet and cultural historian Robert Bringhurst’s study of Indigenous Haida myth. This comparison is further examined through anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss on how both myth and music have historically expressed non-linear felt-senses of time. Susanne Langer’s Philosophy in a New Key: A Study in the Symbolism of Reason, Rite and Art shows how discursive language is fundamentally limited in its ability to express the contradictions, nuances, and ambiguities inherent to human feeling and experience. The project extends Langer’s argument that discursive language generates meaning incompatible with the rhythms and patterns of our feelings themselves, whereas music—non-discursively and non-representationally—is capable of articulating the qualities of our felt-experiences. In support of Langer, musical works by Nick Cave, Bob Dylan, John Coltrane, Stars of the Lid, William Basinski, and Leyland Kirby are discussed.
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author Nixon, Luke
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Beyond representation: Music, language, and mental life
author_facet Nixon, Luke
author_sort Nixon, Luke
title Beyond representation: Music, language, and mental life
title_short Beyond representation: Music, language, and mental life
title_full Beyond representation: Music, language, and mental life
title_fullStr Beyond representation: Music, language, and mental life
title_full_unstemmed Beyond representation: Music, language, and mental life
title_sort beyond representation: music, language, and mental life
publishDate 2021
url http://summit.sfu.ca/item/21536
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