Description

Book Synopsis
Adorno’s writings are often the starting point for the teaching of popular music studies, usually passing swiftly on, after concluding that ‘he didn’t listen to the right jazz’ or ‘he was a snob’. In this book, using Adorno’s aesthetic theory more generally, a viable philosophical approach to the study of idiomatic, non- standard music is constructed. The links between Adorno’s work and its Kantian roots are explored, and a more general and inclusive aesthetic constructed, using the utopian and implicitly political elements in each. This book will be of interest to critical theorists and musicologists wishing to build a more engaged practice without the pitfalls of a by now outdated ‘postmodern’ turn.

Trade Review
Neither Kant, because he disparages music, nor Adorno, because he despises the culture industry, seem promising starting points for an investigation into the aesthetics of pop. But Stan Erraught conjures up a very Kantian Adorno to find redemptive value in contemporary commercial sounds and provide useful philosophical ballast for all those who wish to take popular music seriously. -- Mark Abel, Senior Lecturer at the University of Brighton and Author of Groove: An Aesthetic of Measured Time
In this subtle and thoughtful book, Stan Erraught stages a dialogue between popular music and the aesthetic theories of Kant and Adorno. Despite Adorno's hostility to popular music, Erraught uses Kant's and Adorno's ideas to argue that popular music has positive value. Erraught also shines new light on Kant and Adorno by re-reading their work in light of developments in popular music. This highly original study will interest readers from popular music studies as well as from aesthetics and philosophy of music. -- Alison Stone, Professor of European Philosophy, Lancaster University
Erraught contends that popular music—not Mozart or Beethoven—powerfully exemplifies the paradoxes of music’s ineffability. To support his claim, he stages a novel conversation between Kant and Adorno that helps us grasp the philosophical significance of musical genres that transfix us with their intensity. The result is elegant, comparative, and wide-ranging in all the right ways. -- Michael Gallope, Assistant Professor in the Department of Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature at the University of Minnesota
Stan Erraught has achieved what was once unthinkable: the productive rehabilitation and extension of Adorno’s aesthetics by means of popular music. Returning to the Kantian foundations of Adorno’s thought, Erraught shows the untapped potential for pop to exemplify and challenge utopian thinking, thereby recovering a promesse du bonheur for these dark times. -- Ryan Dohoney, Assistant Professor of Musicology at Northwestern University

Table of Contents
Introduction / 1 – A Reading of Kant's "Critique of Aesthetic Judgement" / 2. Aesthetics into Politics 3. Aesthetic Theory / 4. Kant against Adorno, Adorno against Adorno / 5. (Coda) – Music, Finally.

On Music, Value and Utopia: Nostalgia for an Age

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    A Paperback / softback by Stan Erraught

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      View other formats and editions of On Music, Value and Utopia: Nostalgia for an Age by Stan Erraught

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield International
      Publication Date: 01/07/2019
      ISBN13: 9781786612694, 978-1786612694
      ISBN10: 1786612690

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Adorno’s writings are often the starting point for the teaching of popular music studies, usually passing swiftly on, after concluding that ‘he didn’t listen to the right jazz’ or ‘he was a snob’. In this book, using Adorno’s aesthetic theory more generally, a viable philosophical approach to the study of idiomatic, non- standard music is constructed. The links between Adorno’s work and its Kantian roots are explored, and a more general and inclusive aesthetic constructed, using the utopian and implicitly political elements in each. This book will be of interest to critical theorists and musicologists wishing to build a more engaged practice without the pitfalls of a by now outdated ‘postmodern’ turn.

      Trade Review
      Neither Kant, because he disparages music, nor Adorno, because he despises the culture industry, seem promising starting points for an investigation into the aesthetics of pop. But Stan Erraught conjures up a very Kantian Adorno to find redemptive value in contemporary commercial sounds and provide useful philosophical ballast for all those who wish to take popular music seriously. -- Mark Abel, Senior Lecturer at the University of Brighton and Author of Groove: An Aesthetic of Measured Time
      In this subtle and thoughtful book, Stan Erraught stages a dialogue between popular music and the aesthetic theories of Kant and Adorno. Despite Adorno's hostility to popular music, Erraught uses Kant's and Adorno's ideas to argue that popular music has positive value. Erraught also shines new light on Kant and Adorno by re-reading their work in light of developments in popular music. This highly original study will interest readers from popular music studies as well as from aesthetics and philosophy of music. -- Alison Stone, Professor of European Philosophy, Lancaster University
      Erraught contends that popular music—not Mozart or Beethoven—powerfully exemplifies the paradoxes of music’s ineffability. To support his claim, he stages a novel conversation between Kant and Adorno that helps us grasp the philosophical significance of musical genres that transfix us with their intensity. The result is elegant, comparative, and wide-ranging in all the right ways. -- Michael Gallope, Assistant Professor in the Department of Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature at the University of Minnesota
      Stan Erraught has achieved what was once unthinkable: the productive rehabilitation and extension of Adorno’s aesthetics by means of popular music. Returning to the Kantian foundations of Adorno’s thought, Erraught shows the untapped potential for pop to exemplify and challenge utopian thinking, thereby recovering a promesse du bonheur for these dark times. -- Ryan Dohoney, Assistant Professor of Musicology at Northwestern University

      Table of Contents
      Introduction / 1 – A Reading of Kant's "Critique of Aesthetic Judgement" / 2. Aesthetics into Politics 3. Aesthetic Theory / 4. Kant against Adorno, Adorno against Adorno / 5. (Coda) – Music, Finally.

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