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English
Oxford University Press Inc
11 December 2019
Rhythm is the fundamental pulse that animates poetry, music, and dance across all cultures. And yet the recent explosion of scholarly interest across disciplines in the aural dimensions of aesthetic experience--particularly in sociology, cultural and media theory, and literary studies--has yet to explore this fundamental category. This book furthers the discussion of rhythm beyond the discrete conceptual domains and technical vocabularies of musicology and prosody. With original essays by philosophers, psychologists, musicians, literary theorists, and ethno-musicologists, The Philosophy of Rhythm opens up wider-and plural-perspectives, examining formal affinities between the historically interconnected fields of music, dance, and poetry, while addressing key concepts such as embodiment, movement, pulse, and performance. Volume editors Peter Cheyne, Andy Hamilton, and Max Paddison bring together a range of key questions: What is the distinction between rhythm and pulse? What is the relationship between everyday embodied experience, and the specific experience of music, dance, and poetry? Can aesthetics offer an understanding of rhythm that helps inform our responses to visual and other arts, as well as music, dance, and poetry? And, what is the relation between psychological conceptions of entrainment, and the humane concept of rhythm and meter? Overall, The Philosophy of Rhythm appeals across disciplinary boundaries, providing a unique overview of a neglected aspect of aesthetic experience.

Edited by:   , , , , , ,
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 183mm,  Width: 260mm,  Spine: 29mm
Weight:   1g
ISBN:   9780199347773
ISBN 10:   0199347778
Pages:   440
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
List of Illustrations List of Abbreviations Notes on Contributors Introduction Part I: Movement and Stasis 1. Dialogue on Rhythm: Entrainment and the Dynamic Thesis 2. Rhythm and Movement 3. The Ontology of Rhythm 4. 'Feeling the Beat': Multimodal Perception and the Experience of Musical Movement 5. Dance Rhythm Part II. Emotion and Expression 6. The Life of Rhythm: Dewey, Relational Perception, and the 'Cumulative Effect' 7. Rhythm, Preceding its Abstraction 8. Mozart's 'Dissonance' and the Dialectic of Language and Thought in Classical Theories of Rhythm 9. Rhythm and Popular Music 10. Rhythms, Resemblance, and Musical Expressiveness Part III: Entrainment and the Social Dimension 11. Metric Entrainment and the Problem(s) of Perception 12. Entrainment and the Social Origins of Musical Rhythm 13. How Many Kinds of Rhythm Are There? 14. Temporal Processing and the Experience of Rhythm: A Neuro-psychological Approach Part IV. Time and Experience: Subjective and Objective Rhythm 15. Complexity and Passage: Experimenting with Poetic Rhythm 16. Encoded and Embodied Rhythm: An Unprioritized Ontology 17. Time, Duration, Rhythm: The Aesthetics of Temporality in Bachelard and Deliège 18. Husserl's Model of Time-Consciousness, and the Phenomenology of Rhythm 19. Pictorial Experience and the Perception of Rhythm 20. Soundless Rhythm Part V. Reading Rhythm 21. Hearing it Right: Rhythm and Reading 22. The Not-so-silent Reading: What Does it Mean to Say that we Appreciate Rhythm in Literature? 23. Leaving it Out: Rhythm and Short Form in the Modernist Poetic Tradition 24. Rhythm, Meter, and the Poetics of Abstraction

Peter Cheyne is Associate Professor at Shimane University, and Visiting Fellow in Philosophy at Durham University. He leads two international projects, one on the Aesthetics of Perfection and Imperfection, and the other on the 17th- to 19th-century Philosophy of the Life Sciences. Andy Hamilton teaches philosophy at Durham University, UK. He specialises in aesthetics, philosophy of mind, political philosophy, and history of 19th- and 20th-century philosophy, especially Wittgenstein. Max Paddison is Emeritus Professor of Music Aesthetics at the University of Durham. He works in critical theory, philosophy, contemporary music, and popular music.

Reviews for The Philosophy of Rhythm: Aesthetics, Music, Poetics

This wonderful collection considers questions about rhythm from a wide variety of angles, perspectives, and disciplines-among them analytic and continental philosophy, musicology, art history, poetics, and neuroscience. Like the dialogue that opens the book, The Philosophy of Rhythm supports no particular line of thought or argument but enormously deepens our understanding of a topic so palpable and yet so mysterious. * Christoph Cox, Hampshire College * A fascinating and broad overview. This book covers dance, poetry, literature, and painting, as well as music, all considered from a multidisciplinary perspective and including both Continental and analytic approaches to philosophy. This unfairly neglected topic richly rewards the serious treatment thatThe Philosophy of Rhythm accords it. * Stephen Davies, University of Auckland * Fascinating and mysterious, rhythm is at the heart of music, dance, poetry, sociology, and neuroscience. This inspired volume engages, enlightens, and is the first to explore rhythm across a broad range of philosophical, aesthetic, and perceptual domains. This book is required reading for anyone concerned with time and rhythm in contemporary life. * Peter Nelson, University of Edinburgh * This remarkable collection of essays brings together philosophical and empirical approaches to the significance of rhythm across the arts. The approach is refreshingly interdisciplinary. Anyone concerned with the place of rhythm and metric structure in the arts, and-more generally-within the wider domain of human practices will find this an extraordinarily helpful volume. * Robert Kraut, The Ohio State University *


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