Description
About the Author
Nathan Waddell is a Senior Lecturer in Early Twentieth-Century and Modernist Literature in the Department of English Literature at the University of Birmingham. He is the author of Modern John Buchan (2009) and Modernist Nowheres: Politics and Utopia in Early Modernist Writing, 1900-1920 (2012), and a co-editor of several volumes of scholarly essays, including: Wyndham Lewis and the Cultures of Modernity (2011); Utopianism, Modernism, and Literature in the Twentieth Century (2013); John Buchan and the Idea of Modernity (2013); Wyndham Lewis: A Critical Guide (2015); and 'Brave New World': Contexts and Legacies (2016).
Reviews
Moonlighting is particularly enlightening in its commentary on representations of women performing Beethoven. * Scott McCracken, Pilgrimages: A Journal of Dorothy Richardson Studies (PUBLICATION) *
Moonlighting would be an excellent book for an interdisciplinary graduate seminar on music and literature. ... For music students and scholars, one challenge presented by Moonlighting might be the sheer volume of literary references and the close reading of literary texts. Ultimately, the book is highly recommended as a work of paramusicology, offering a fascinating exploration of the liminal space between Beethoven and Beethovenism via its accessible prose, authoritative analyses, and nearly seamless integration of literary and musicological sources. * Alexander Carpenter, Music Library Association *
Moonlighting is a revealing lesson in understanding how and why modernist authors engaged with these Beethovenian tropes...Novels, [Waddell] points out, are not just stories or representations of ideas; they are a space in which to study music and the concrete ways in which we engage with it. Waddell's framing of novelists as musicologists at the beginning of Moonlighting is therefore apt. By the end of the book, Waddell has demonstrated convincingly how authors like West, Lewis and Richardson explored responses to Beethoven - not through research, but through imaginative novels that combined musical sensitivity with literary insight. * Colin Ziegler, Eighteenth-Century Music *
Moonlighting is exemplary in demonstrating the value of attending closely to those passing references to musical culture that are often overlooked in accounts of literary modernism. * Fraser Riddell, Modernism / Modernity *
Moonlighting delivers an invaluable appraisal of the Beethovenian in modernist literature, and its contributions to musico-literary scholarship will continue to emerge with the benefit of time and further exploration. * Jon Churchill, The Modernist Review *
What is certain is that Waddell has produced a brilliant account of the ways in which Beethoven's work was perceived, consumed and transformed by the writers of the modernist era. It is a work of tremendous erudition, full of thought-provoking ideas, conveyed with zest, discrimination and enthusiasm. Scholars of literature and music will discover something new on every page, and the general reader will marvel at the breadth and scope of this excellent book. * Rob Spence, formerly Associate Head of the Department of English and History at Edge Hill University, Shiny New Books *
a brilliant account of the ways in which Beethoven's work was perceived, consumed and transformed by the writers of the modernist era. It is a work of tremendous erudition, full of thought-provoking ideas, conveyed with zest, discrimination and enthusiasm. Scholars of literature and music will discover something new on every page, and the general reader will marvel at the breadth and scope of this excellent book. * Rob Spence, Shiny New Books *
Book Information
ISBN 9780198816706
Author Nathan Waddell
Format Hardback
Page Count 272
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 578g
Dimensions(mm) 240mm * 161mm * 22mm