Fugitive Voice
Author(s) -
Martha S. Feldman
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
representations
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.162
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 1533-855X
pISSN - 0734-6018
DOI - 10.1525/rep.2021.154.2.10
Subject(s) - harmony (color) , aesthetics , space (punctuation) , sound (geography) , sociology , art , acoustics , visual arts , linguistics , philosophy , physics
This essay proposes that current-day notions of fugitivity, understood in the terms Fred Moten proposes as a category of the irregular that escapes easy representations and predications, can undiscipline music histories in productive ways. Among these: it can inflect musicological thinking through attention to sonic remainders of haunted pasts; it can decenter understandings of the aesthetic; and it can lead to more nuanced thinking about the imbrication of music in an “undercommons” of life that refuses ever to fully sound in harmony, residing instead in a disordered space of restless, noisy sound. The essay asks, finally, how such thinking, developed by Moten, Nathaniel Mackey, and Daphne Brooks, among others, can remake aspects of musicological thinking about voice.
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