Did Music Cause the End of the World?

This essay seeks to clarify the relationship between music and environmental violence. After a reflection on the distortions and insights that different frames of reference produce, it places music within an expansive environmental register that encompasses the entirety of human history, up to and i...

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Main Author: J. Martin Daughtry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Éditions de l'EHESS 2020-03-01
Series:Transposition
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/transposition/5192
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author J. Martin Daughtry
author_facet J. Martin Daughtry
author_sort J. Martin Daughtry
collection DOAJ
description This essay seeks to clarify the relationship between music and environmental violence. After a reflection on the distortions and insights that different frames of reference produce, it places music within an expansive environmental register that encompasses the entirety of human history, up to and including our current era of “slow violence,” industrial pollution, mass extinction, and global warming. Throughout, human musicking is presented as always-already entangled with nonhuman entities and processes. The essay focuses on four of music’s potentialities—its exclusivity, centripetality, instrumentality, and reductivity—and argues that the cumulative effect of musicking has been to help perpetuate a type of anthropocentrism that made industrial-scale environmental violence possible. It concludes by suggesting a number of small tactics for musical thriving in an age when, in Timothy Morton’s words, “the concept of world is no longer operational”.
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spelling doaj.art-3040ebe0bd8349aa887f0d97a56c12832023-09-02T10:50:43ZengÉditions de l'EHESSTransposition2110-61342020-03-01210.4000/transposition.5192Did Music Cause the End of the World?J. Martin DaughtryThis essay seeks to clarify the relationship between music and environmental violence. After a reflection on the distortions and insights that different frames of reference produce, it places music within an expansive environmental register that encompasses the entirety of human history, up to and including our current era of “slow violence,” industrial pollution, mass extinction, and global warming. Throughout, human musicking is presented as always-already entangled with nonhuman entities and processes. The essay focuses on four of music’s potentialities—its exclusivity, centripetality, instrumentality, and reductivity—and argues that the cumulative effect of musicking has been to help perpetuate a type of anthropocentrism that made industrial-scale environmental violence possible. It concludes by suggesting a number of small tactics for musical thriving in an age when, in Timothy Morton’s words, “the concept of world is no longer operational”.http://journals.openedition.org/transposition/5192musicviolenceenvironmentpollutionanthropoceneglobal warming
spellingShingle J. Martin Daughtry
Did Music Cause the End of the World?
Transposition
music
violence
environment
pollution
anthropocene
global warming
title Did Music Cause the End of the World?
title_full Did Music Cause the End of the World?
title_fullStr Did Music Cause the End of the World?
title_full_unstemmed Did Music Cause the End of the World?
title_short Did Music Cause the End of the World?
title_sort did music cause the end of the world
topic music
violence
environment
pollution
anthropocene
global warming
url http://journals.openedition.org/transposition/5192
work_keys_str_mv AT jmartindaughtry didmusiccausetheendoftheworld