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dc.contributor.authorKarlsson, Katarina A
dc.contributor.authorWilson, Christopher R.
dc.contributor.authorGårdfeldt, Gunilla
dc.contributor.authorAxberg, Ulf
dc.contributor.editorKarlsson, Katarina A:
dc.contributor.editorSpeerstra, Joel
dc.date.accessioned2019-03-22T10:03:11Z
dc.date.available2019-03-22T10:03:11Z
dc.date.issued2018-12-11
dc.identifier.isbn9789198517101
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2077/59799
dc.descriptionImages by Harald Nilsson, costumes by Nonno Nordqvistsv
dc.description.abstractThe ‘essentially’ feminine — a mapping through artistic practice of the feminine territory offered by Early Modern Music, is the somewhat complicated title of this book. But the content is not hard to understand a year into the #metoo-movement. It turns out that 400-year-old songs use the same rules as abusive men still do. Songs of love from a man to a woman in seventeenth-century England often contain patterns that today’s survivors of domestic violence recognise: to reject a ‘no,' accuse, threaten and question the loved one’s character. The researcher Katarina A Karlsson has read 755 songs from the time. Among the love songs from a man to a woman, more than half use these rules to varying degrees. Is it possible to perform the songs at all? Katarina A Karlsson, who is also a singer and a writer, has worked with the songs together with musicians, singers, directors, costume designers and lighting designers. Photos document some of this scenic work. Other authors include a psychologist, associate professor Ulf Axberg, a director, professor emerita Gunilla Gårdfeldt-Carlsson and the renowned expert in Early Modern English Music, professor Christopher R. Wilson from the University of Hull. The unique collaboration frames the English Lute Song through artistic research, psychology, musicology, and gender theory. So what kind of territory was the Early Modern woman offered through the music of the time? - A place where she risked losing everything.sv
dc.description.sponsorshipVetenskapsrådetsv
dc.format.extent127sv
dc.language.isoengsv
dc.publisherArt Monitorsv
dc.subjectArtistic researchsv
dc.subjectGender historysv
dc.subjectpsychologysv
dc.subjectmusicologysv
dc.titleThe 'essentially' feminine - a mapping through artistic practice of the feminine territory offered by Early Modern Music.sv
dc.typeTextsv
dc.typeImagesv
dc.type.svepbooksv
dc.contributor.organizationVetenskapsrådetsv


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