<p>âHammond concludes this page-turner by highlighting how the songs and sounds of early modern Paris âgive voice to people who would otherwise have remained silent.â He is to be thanked for making them heard today.â</p><p>âPaul Scott <i>Paris Update</i></p>
<p>âBy resurrecting sounds that occurred in specific acoustical spacesâand at times by analyzing the ways in which certain sounds traversed spacesâHammond offers profound insights into issues of social rank, politics, sexuality, and the complex processes through which information circulated. Hammondâs book, which examines a wide array of acoustic experiences and representations, is a valuable contribution to a recent trend in French studies that is attentive to the sonic, the oral, and the performative.â</p><p>âJohn Romey <i>Journal of Seventeenth-Century Music</i></p>
<p>âHammondâs clear prose conjures the sights and sounds of the terrible punishments meted out to . . . unfortunates accused of various misdeeds. . . . Though the book contains no music notation, Hammond and his team have recorded several of the songs on parisiansoundscapes.org so that readers may listen along. Hearing for the first timeâor rehearing in a new wayâthe songs of the condemned, the ordinary, and the historically forgotten is one of the many pleasures of this fine book.â</p><p>âMichael A. Bane <i>Renaissance Quarterly</i></p>
<p>â[An] unusual, tightly focussed, and evocative book.â</p><p>âMark Greengrass <i>French History</i></p>
<p>âHammondâs evocation of the vanished sound worlds of seventeenth-century France is exemplary, as are the pieces he adds to our puzzle of early-modern sexual activity and sexual identity. That he does so through pages that are consistently a pleasure to read enhances the achievement.â</p><p>âLaura Mason <i>Journal of Modern History</i></p>
<p>âThe book is eclectic, entertainingly written, offering unexpected insights into many aspects of seventeenth-century Paris.â</p><p>âDavid Garrioch <i>H-France</i></p>
<p>â<i>The Powers of Sound and Song</i> should encourage all historians to re-evaluate their approach to elements of the past that, at first glance, may seem ephemeral or unknowable, and to view the subjects of their enquiries through all five senses, not just visually. A book that will be valuable not just to music historians and cultural historians, but to historians of sexualities as well, <i>The Powers of Sound and Song</i> shows us how to listen to Paris, a model that will be valuable for urban historians too.â</p><p>âUna McIlvenna <i>H-France</i></p>
<p>â[There are] many promising avenues for future research opened by <i>The Powers of Sound and Song</i> <i>in Early Modern Paris, and scholars are indebted to Nicholas Hammond for showing how to break the silence that has for too long muffled the many sounds of early modern France.</i>â</p><p>âLewis C. Seifert <i>H-France</i></p>
<p>âThe profound originality of this book by Nicholas Hammond is to be applauded. In helping us hear and understand in all its diversity the sonic universe of Paris at the beginning of Louis XIV's personal reign, this stimulating study uncovers a neglected <i>tranche</i> of culture from this period. It needed all the finesse and curiosity of an accomplished researcher to reproduce the complexity of the age, right down to the most somber tones of songs that accompanied the major moments of a period rich in contrast.â</p><p>âDelphine Denis, UniversitĂ© Paris-Sorbonne</p>
<p>âA place of encounter and shared listening for people of all classes, the newly built Pont Neuf becomes, in this academic page-turner, the site of discoveries that transform our understanding of seventeenth-century Paris. Gradually, through the clamor of the public world, we make out the echoes of its vast homosexual subculture. Hammond contributes innovatively to historical sound studies and renders the familiar strange, new, and newly exciting for historians, literary scholars, and musicologists alike.â</p><p>âSarah Kay, author of <i>Parrots and Nightingales: Troubadour Quotations and the Development of European Poetry</i></p>
<p>âThis erudite, innovative, and highly readable study draws attention to early modern Parisâs neglected soundscapes. Focusing on the Pont Neuf and its singers, Hammond pieces together a compelling microhistory in which song and sodomy simultaneously reveal, contest, and cut across the fundamental distinctions of social class that structure Louis XIVâs France.â</p><p>âGary Ferguson, author of <i>Queer (Re)Readings in the French Renaissance</i></p>
<p>âTaking as a motif a recovered song fragment by Jacques Chausson from the <i>Chansonnier Maurepas</i>, Hammond vividly describes the promiscuous power of sound worlds from the time of the Sun King, a period usually associated with displays of visual opulence and absolutist control.â</p><p>âAimĂ©e Boutin, author of <i>City of Noise: Sound and Nineteenth-Century Paris</i></p>
<p>âThis book opens on a vibrant evocation of an aspect of early modern Paris that has been too often overlooked: the sounds of Parisian streets in the 17th and 18th centuries. Nicholas Hammond explores a new way of imagining the early modern city.â</p><p>âJoan DeJean, author of <i>The Reinvention of Obscenity: Sex, Lies, and Tabloids in Early Modern France</i></p>
<p>âAn important, absorbing, and astonishingly original book. While scholars have long focused on the visual aspects of French absolutism, Hammond offers an entirely new interpretation by turning his attention to the auditory worlds of early modern Paris. Examining a wide range of acoustic experiences and representations, from songs to remonstrations, the book shows that sound played a crucial role in shaping identities at all social levels. As Hammond traces these acoustic echoes of the past, he creates a gripping narrative that deepens our understanding of class, politics, sexuality, and punishment in seventeenth-century Parisian culture.â</p><p>âPeter Denney, Griffith University</p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Nicholas Hammond is Professor of Early Modern French Literature and Culture at the University of Cambridge.