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Sounding Bodies: Acoustical Science and Musical Erotics in Victorian Literature

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Shows how nineteenth-century discoveries in acoustical science shaped Victorian literary representations of gender, sexuality, and intimacy.

Can the concert hall be as erotic as the bedroom? Many Victorian writers believed so. In the mid-nineteenth century, acoustical scientists such as Hermann von Helmholtz and John Tyndall described music as a set of physical vibrations that tickled the ear, excited the nerves, and precipitated muscular convulsions. In turn, writers-from canonical figures such as George Eliot and Thomas Hardy, to New Women novelists like Sarah Grand and Bertha Thomas, to anonymous authors of underground pornography-depicted bodily sensations and experiences in unusually explicit ways. These writers used scenes of music listening and performance to intervene in urgent conversations about gender and sexuality and explore issues of agency, pleasure, violence, desire, and kinship. Sounding Bodies shows how both classical music and Victorian literature, while often considered bastions of conservatism and repression, represented powerful sites for feminist and queer politics.

294 pages, Paperback

Published January 2, 2025

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Shannon Draucker

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309 reviews1 follower
September 4, 2025
Wonderfully smart, lucid, and wide-reaching study of the ways (mostly late-)Victorian culture theorized the relationship between the body and music. Draucker provides important reconceptualizations of the erotic, of queer sensation, and of sexual danger for Victorianists and historians of music. Really well done!
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