Description
Romantic Music Aesthetics examines the profound relationship between music, emotion, and political ideology during the Romantic period. Matthew Pritchard argues that Romantic composers and theorists developed sophisticated frameworks for understanding how music could generate, express, and manipulate human emotions in ways that had significant social and political implications.
The book traces the development of Romantic aesthetic theory through the works of major composers and philosophers, demonstrating how musical innovation became inseparable from broader cultural movements. Pritchard explores how the elevation of emotion and imagination in Romantic thought transformed music from entertainment into a vehicle for philosophical and political expression.
By analyzing key compositions, theoretical texts, and historical contexts, this work reveals how Romantic music aesthetics created new possibilities for political engagement and social commentary, ultimately establishing music as a central concern of modern aesthetic philosophy.







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