The Sculpted Ear: Aurality and Statuary in the West

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Sound and statuary have had a complicated relationship in Western aesthetic thought since antiquity. Taking as its focus the sounding statue—a type of anthropocentric statue that invites the viewer to imagine sounds the statue might make—Sculpted Ears rethinks this relationship in light of discourses on aurality emerging within the field of sound studies. Ryan McCormack argues that the sounding statue is best thought of not as an aesthetic object but as an event heard by people and subsequently conceptualized into being through acts of writing and performance.

Constructing a history in which hearing plays an integral role in ideas about anthropocentric statuary, McCormack begins with the ancient sculpture of Laocoön, before moving to a discussion of the early modern automaton known as Tipu’s Tiger and the statue of the Commendatore in Mozart’s Don Giovanni. Finally, he examines statues of people from the present and the past, including the singer Josephine Baker, the violinist Aleksandar Nikolov, and the actor Bob Newhart—with each case touching on some of the issues that have historically plagued the aesthetic viability of the sounding statue. McCormack convincingly demonstrates how sounding statues served as important precursors and continuing contributors to modern ideas about the ontology of sound, technologies of sound reproduction, and performance practices blurring traditional divides between music, sculpture, and the other arts.

A compelling narrative that illuminates the stories of individual sculptural objects and the audiences that hear them, this book will appeal to anyone interested in the connections between aurality and statues in the Western world, in particular scholars and students of sound studies and sensory history.

Author(s): Ryan McCormack
Series: Perspectives on Sensory History, 2
Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
Year: 2020

Language: English
Pages: 226
City: University Park

COVER front
Series Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Elvis Leaves the Building
Notes to Introduction
Chapter 1: Animation Introduces Animation
Notes to Chapter 1
Chapter 2: Breathing Voice into Laocoön’s Mouth
Notes to Chapter 2
Chapter 3: Imperial Possessions
Notes to Chapter 3
Chapter 4: Hearing a Stone Man
Notes to Chapter 4
Chapter 5: Aural Skins
Notes to Chapter 5
Chapter 6: Now You Have to Go, Comrade
Notes to Chaper 6
Chapter 7: Museums of Resonance
Notes to Chapter 7
Conclusion: I Now Present Sergei Rachmaninoff
Notes to Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index