“Unusual, Gentle Sensory Stimuli”: A Psychoanalytical Path to the Early Aesthesis of Hans Werner Henze

Musicology and psychoanalysis still face each other strangely. Yet, there are quite fruitful initiatives for dealing with musical phenomena from a psychoanalytical perspective, as this article tries to show with the example of the early music aesthetics of Hans Werner Henze. Led by the Lacanian mode...

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Main Author: Christian Bielefeldt
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts) 2007-12-01
Series:Muzikološki Zbornik
Subjects:
Online Access:https://193.2.70.196/MuzikoloskiZbornik/article/view/5476
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spelling doaj-37da29fe9b4d49bf835807b8e41f28552021-03-02T03:11:12ZdeuZnanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts)Muzikološki Zbornik0580-373X2350-42422007-12-01432“Unusual, Gentle Sensory Stimuli”: A Psychoanalytical Path to the Early Aesthesis of Hans Werner HenzeChristian BielefeldtMusicology and psychoanalysis still face each other strangely. Yet, there are quite fruitful initiatives for dealing with musical phenomena from a psychoanalytical perspective, as this article tries to show with the example of the early music aesthetics of Hans Werner Henze. Led by the Lacanian model of imaginary-symbolic-real, Henzes texts from from the 1950s are read in a way in which the aesthetics “of a free, wild sound” is linked to the requirement of music being communicative. Musical communication is understood thereby differently as in the later, politically engaged phase of Henze. It is still understood as an excessive moment of the conventional auditive signs, in which listener dissolves the traditionally fixed senses. With Lacan, this situation of hearing may be described as a musical representation of the ‘I’, which is fundamentally more unstable than linguistic self-representations, leading consequently toward an enjoyment as a condition of temporary self-loss.https://193.2.70.196/MuzikoloskiZbornik/article/view/5476music and psychoanalysisaesthetics of musicHans Werner Henzemusic and communication
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christian Bielefeldt
spellingShingle Christian Bielefeldt
“Unusual, Gentle Sensory Stimuli”: A Psychoanalytical Path to the Early Aesthesis of Hans Werner Henze
Muzikološki Zbornik
music and psychoanalysis
aesthetics of music
Hans Werner Henze
music and communication
author_facet Christian Bielefeldt
author_sort Christian Bielefeldt
title “Unusual, Gentle Sensory Stimuli”: A Psychoanalytical Path to the Early Aesthesis of Hans Werner Henze
title_short “Unusual, Gentle Sensory Stimuli”: A Psychoanalytical Path to the Early Aesthesis of Hans Werner Henze
title_full “Unusual, Gentle Sensory Stimuli”: A Psychoanalytical Path to the Early Aesthesis of Hans Werner Henze
title_fullStr “Unusual, Gentle Sensory Stimuli”: A Psychoanalytical Path to the Early Aesthesis of Hans Werner Henze
title_full_unstemmed “Unusual, Gentle Sensory Stimuli”: A Psychoanalytical Path to the Early Aesthesis of Hans Werner Henze
title_sort “unusual, gentle sensory stimuli”: a psychoanalytical path to the early aesthesis of hans werner henze
publisher Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete Univerze v Ljubljani (Ljubljana University Press, Faculty of Arts)
series Muzikološki Zbornik
issn 0580-373X
2350-4242
publishDate 2007-12-01
description Musicology and psychoanalysis still face each other strangely. Yet, there are quite fruitful initiatives for dealing with musical phenomena from a psychoanalytical perspective, as this article tries to show with the example of the early music aesthetics of Hans Werner Henze. Led by the Lacanian model of imaginary-symbolic-real, Henzes texts from from the 1950s are read in a way in which the aesthetics “of a free, wild sound” is linked to the requirement of music being communicative. Musical communication is understood thereby differently as in the later, politically engaged phase of Henze. It is still understood as an excessive moment of the conventional auditive signs, in which listener dissolves the traditionally fixed senses. With Lacan, this situation of hearing may be described as a musical representation of the ‘I’, which is fundamentally more unstable than linguistic self-representations, leading consequently toward an enjoyment as a condition of temporary self-loss.
topic music and psychoanalysis
aesthetics of music
Hans Werner Henze
music and communication
url https://193.2.70.196/MuzikoloskiZbornik/article/view/5476
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