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Music and the Environment in Dystopian Narrative

Sounding the Disaster

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  • 100 pages
  • 4 hours of reading

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Music and the Environment in Dystopian Narrative: Sounding the Disaster investigates the active role of music in film and fiction portraying climate crisis. From contemporary science fiction and environmental film to “Anthropocene opera,” the most arresting eco-narratives draw less on background music than on the power of sound to move fictional action and those who receive it. Beginning with a reflection on a Mozart recording on the 1970s’ Voyager Golden Record, this book explores links between music and violence in Lidia Yuknavitch’s 2017 novel The Book of Joan , songless speech in the opera Persephone in the Late Anthropocene , interrupted lyricism in the eco-documentary Expedition to the End of the World , and dread-inducing hurricane music in the Brecht-Weill opera Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny. In all of these works, music allows for a state of critical vulnerability in its hearers, communicating planetary crisis in an embodied way.

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Music and the Environment in Dystopian Narrative, Heidi Hart

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Released
2018
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Title
Music and the Environment in Dystopian Narrative
Subtitle
Sounding the Disaster
Language
English
Authors
Heidi Hart
Released
2018
Format
Hardcover
Pages
100
ISBN10
3030018148
ISBN13
9783030018146
Series
Description
Music and the Environment in Dystopian Narrative: Sounding the Disaster investigates the active role of music in film and fiction portraying climate crisis. From contemporary science fiction and environmental film to “Anthropocene opera,” the most arresting eco-narratives draw less on background music than on the power of sound to move fictional action and those who receive it. Beginning with a reflection on a Mozart recording on the 1970s’ Voyager Golden Record, this book explores links between music and violence in Lidia Yuknavitch’s 2017 novel The Book of Joan , songless speech in the opera Persephone in the Late Anthropocene , interrupted lyricism in the eco-documentary Expedition to the End of the World , and dread-inducing hurricane music in the Brecht-Weill opera Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny. In all of these works, music allows for a state of critical vulnerability in its hearers, communicating planetary crisis in an embodied way.