Improvisation as Art: Conceptual Challenges, Historical Perspectives

Author:   Edgar Landgraf
Publisher:   Continuum Publishing Corporation
Volume:   1
ISBN:  

9781441146946


Pages:   176
Publication Date:   19 May 2011
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Improvisation as Art: Conceptual Challenges, Historical Perspectives


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Overview

Improvisation as Art traces how modernitys emphasis on inventiveness has changed the meaning of improvisation; and how the ideals and laws that led improvisation to be banned from high art in the eighteenth century simultaneously enabled the inventive reintegration of improvisation into modernism. After an in-depth exploration of contemporary theoretical contentions surrounding improvisation, Landgraf examines how the new emphasis on inventiveness affects the understanding of improvisation in the emerging aesthetic and anthropological discourses of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. He first focuses on accounts of improvisational performances by Moritz, Goethe, and Fernow and reads them alongside the aesthetics of autonomy as it develops at the same time. In its second half, the book investigates how the problem of planning art receives a different treatment in German Romanticism. The final chapter focuses on the writings of Heinrich von Kleist where improvisation presents a central aesthetic principle. Kleists figurations of improvisation recognize the anthropological predicament of the self in modern society and the social constraints that invite and often force individuals to improvise.

Full Product Details

Author:   Edgar Landgraf
Publisher:   Continuum Publishing Corporation
Imprint:   Continuum Publishing Corporation
Volume:   1
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.374kg
ISBN:  

9781441146946


ISBN 10:   1441146946
Pages:   176
Publication Date:   19 May 2011
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Reviews

Review Author: David E. Wellbery, LeRoy T. and Margaret Deffenbaugh Carlson University Professor, Department of Germanic Studies, University of Chicago, USA Review Content: Edgar Landgraf s Improvisation as Art marks a genuine intellectual breakthrough. It not only unfolds a highly original account of the emergence of aesthetic autonomy around 1800, but also recasts the terms of the ongoing effort to conceptualize artistic improvisation. Without a trace of tendentiousness, Landgraf develops a neocybernetic critique of major theoretical positions (e.g., Butler, Derrida) and introduces the reader along the way to a flexible methodology of cultural analysis. Historical erudition, intellectual agility, and commitment to clarity are the salient features of Landgraf s scholarly voice. His book is an abundant conceptual resource to which readers will often return.


Review Author: Bruce Clarke, Professor of Literature and Science, Texas Tech University, USA, and co-editor of The Routledge Companion to Literature and Science. Review Content: Landgraf writes with refreshing clarity, showing how neocybernetics systems theory in the line from Heinz von Foerster to Niklas Luhmann offers concepts that resolve prior impasses in theoretical approaches to improvisation. His nuanced treatments of Derrida and Luhmann on modernity and invention rival Cary Wolfe s seminal work at this important intersection. Landgraf s itinerary modulates effectively from keen textual detail to broad historical and aesthetic matters. Establishing links from German Romantic practice to classical, premodern, modernist, and postmodernist artistic forms, Improvisation as Art develops a superbly coherent and persuasive argument, well positioned in the midst of significant and timely critical debates.


Review Author: Bruce Clarke, Professor of Literature and Science, Texas Tech University, USA, and co-editor of The Routledge Companion to Literature and Science. Review Content: Landgraf writes with refreshing clarity, showing how neocybernetics--systems theory in the line from Heinz von Foerster to Niklas Luhmann--offers concepts that resolve prior impasses in theoretical approaches to improvisation. His nuanced treatments of Derrida and Luhmann on modernity and invention rival Cary Wolfe's seminal work at this important intersection. Landgraf's itinerary modulates effectively from keen textual detail to broad historical and aesthetic matters. Establishing links from German Romantic practice to classical, premodern, modernist, and postmodernist artistic forms, Improvisation as Art develops a superbly coherent and persuasive argument, well positioned in the midst of significant and timely critical debates.?


Author Information

Edgar Landgraf is Associate Professor of German in the Department of German, Russian, and East Asian Languages at Bowling Green State University, USA.

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