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Volume 7, no. 1: Music, Morals, and the Body:
An Academic Issue in Turku, 1653–1808 . By Jukka Sarjala. Studia Historica 65. Helsinki: Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura—Finnish
Literature Society, 2001. [264 pp. ISBN 951-746-264-6 150 Markkaa ($21)]
Reviewed by Inna Naroditskaya*1. Poetics of Academia2. Organization and Contents3. ConclusionReferences1. Poetics of Academia1.1 For me as an ethnomusicologist, who attempts to bridge traditional musicology and cultural studies, the monograph of Jukka Sarjala is especially interesting. Dismissing the analysis of music as a set of autonomous structures, the author places music at the center of an intellectual discourse about desire, fantasy, and imagination—philosophical questions which bore significantly on the society, culture, and gender dynamics of the city Turku1 in the early modern period. The central issue of the monograph is the changing perception, in a Protestant academic environment, of the magic power of music. The author explores the reciprocity between ideas about music and the social norms of Turku. Academic writing and publicly presented debates (disputations) on music mirrored social values; and musical sensibilities in turn affected the construction of values and norms. 1.2 Like literary historian and theorist Stephen Greenblatt, who searches for a poetics of culture in hidden places of negotiation and exchange (p. 13), Sarjala avoids writing about original and famous authors and movements and instead looks for the ordinary, referring to the not so well-known academics of a Protestant university town (p. 14). The documents examined in the monograph were generated within two Turku institutions, the Royal Academy and the Musical Society, over a period of 160 years from the 1650s, the early days of the Academy, to 1808, the date of the Musical Societys last festival. Sarjalas subject displaces the reader from well-known European centers and moves across established periods (from the middle Baroque to pre-Romanticism). 1.3 Sarjalas primary sources include five dissertations on music produced at the Royal Academy and seventeen public lectures presented at the Musical Society of Turku. Arguing the importance of this study, Sarjala writes in the conclusion:
By limiting the scope of the subject, Sarjala is able to investigate in depth the inherent connection of musical philosophy with various layers of religious belief, scholarly argument, social conduct, and the function of both music and musical knowledge. Sarjala compares academic Turku with the neighboring schools of Uppsala, Tartu, and Lund, all part of the northern intellectual milieu, highly influenced by German scholarship. 2. Organization and Contents 2.1 The monograph
is divided into seven chapters including an introduction which provides
the historiography of the study of affects in music. The second chapter
outlines the origin, purposes, and structure of the Royal Academy and
the connection of Turkus academic setting with both Western and Northern
intellectual traditions. The third chapter explores the Academys interpretation
of the baroque doctrine of affects. The fourth chapter approaches the
emerging view of music as a moderating force that, operating under the
control of reason, (p. 119) stabilizes emotions and tames sensuality,
with music itself representing an eternal life tasted beforehand (p.
140). The fifth chapter focuses on the change of ideas and perception
of music in Turku during the second half of the eighteenth century, when
music did not provoke the listener; it evoked his or her feelings—ideas
advocated by the newly established Musical Society of Turku. The sixth
chapter discusses the concept of musical expression as a source of sensation
and happiness. The seventh chapter summarizes the authors discursive
journey through philosophy and aesthetics and reveals the dynamic between
music and society, intellectual and corporeal, at the beginning of the
Romantic era.
2.2 In the Introduction,
the author poses a question (p. 20): what kind of powers, properties,
and potentialities were inherent in tones, rhythms, and harmonies, and
finally, in the recipient, so that music could excite, soothe, recreate,
elevate, habituate, and civilize human beings? Sarjala scrutinizes Turkus
view that musical power should be employed as a practical tool for regulating
psychological and social dynamics (p. 26). Thus the introduction establishes
the focus of the monograph as music in relation to social practice, theoretical
discipline, and subject of politics (p. 27).
2.3 Intellectual
and Social Conditions contains factual material on the Royal Academy
of Turku, whose four departments, Theology, Law, Medicine, and Art (or
Philosophy), reflected the social hierarchy of the time and place. Music
was not originally included in the academic curriculum, and the first
music faculty was appointed only in 1747. Describing ideas and academic
traditions embraced by the Academy in the seventeenth century, the author
employs materials from several dissertations. Pointing out that it is
not certain who actually wrote these theses (students, professors or both),
Sarjala suggests that the facts of their writing and publication were
secondary to public debate about them (pp. 44–50). The author also explains
the topics, bibliographic sources, purposes, and formats of these dissertations.
2.4 The Affects as
Forces in Music explores the differences between the notion of affects
in Turku and Central Europe. Jose Antonio Maravall, writing on baroque
and rationalism, notes that the mind of the epoch had come to believe
in the ultimate mathematic structure of human work. This mathematic
structure, as well as the overall tendency toward attaining a technical
manipulation of human conduct,2 can be seen in the musical culture of the Central European Baroque, which
was immersed in the euphoria of newly developed musical genres, and in
the semiotics of ascending and descending passages, melodic and rhythmic
figures. Baroque scholars perceived these innovations as mechanisms that
acted upon human feelings and behaviors. Academic Turku, in contrast,
dealt with the opposite end of the same model. The members of the Academy,
shunning details regarding various shapes and combinations of tones,
melodic lines, rhythms, tempi, or timbres, (p. 81) studied instead emotional
responses to music—desires and fantasies as well as the mechanics of the
body—all energized and activated by music. Sarjala includes citations
of Turkus scholars (including Pro-Chancellor Jahannes Gezelius, professors
Christiern Alander and Henrik Gabriel Porthan) interweaving their voices
with those of their famous European contemporaries, as well as Greek,
Medieval, and Renaissance philosophers. The resulting polyphony of the
text reflects the spirit of the Baroque and exposes different layers of
its aesthetics and philosophy.
2.5 The Stabilization
of Affects by Music focuses specifically on the notions of desire, passion,
and sentiment. Baroque philosophers viewed these emotions as evidence
that human beings, as blind forces of nature, needed monitoring. Recognizing
the possibility of the dangerous effect of music, academicians searched
for the keys to musics moderating power that would serve as a mechanism
for regulating human sentiments and passions. Music was perceived as a
device for establishing right order between reason and emotions, morality
and corporeality, culture and nature. Thus music was the measure, people
were the subjects. Used as stabilizer, music was supposed to produce an
experience of the everlasting, continuing order shining through the sensitive
world (p. 142).
2.6 Institutions and Ideas in Transition describes changes in eighteenth-century aesthetics—a shift from the rational idea of music as a mechanism designed to satisfy a trained listener to the concept of music as a magical force that induces tears. Like Rousseau and Kant, Turku scholars Johan Bilmark and Johan Michelin were disillusioned with the idea of a mathematical correspondence between sound and sense. They observed the separation of music from the confines of church, court, school (p. 145) and the growing role of the general public in the revision of musical ideals and activities. The decline of religious authority, apparent in the shift from Latin to Swedish in public debates, resulted in the "emancipation" of music from the censorship of the church. Later in the chapter Sarjala shows how the ideas of the time energized the upper class and intellectuals of Turku. In the second half of the century, the musical life of Turku was blossoming. The Musical Society was founded, and citizens were offered performances, public debates, lectures, and balls. The author writes: The affected manners of men and women were seasoned with music (p. 168). Public lectures (but not academic debates) were opened to women and the lecturers took pains to address their words to this attractive part of the public too (p. 178). The presence of women in some lectures and musical events and their absence from others lead Sarjala to the discussion of music, gender, and sociability that takes place in the following chapter (pp. 221–29). 2.7 Sensibility and the Pleasure of Music explores the magic of music in terms of joy. By the late eighteenth century, music was no longer perceived as danger but as inspiration. Franc Mickael Franzen, a professor at the Academy of Turku and a lecturer at the annual festival of the Musical Society, analyzed the physiological mechanism which formed the basis of musical pleasure: Music shook the body as a cannon shot shook the windows. This tremor of the nervous and circulatory systems tended to produce a strong effect on the soul. Franzen said it swung the soul as in a dance (p. 189). Exploring the sensibilities of the new age, Sarjala comments that music was no longer explored in terms of formulas that would regulate human actions. Instead music was the shortest way into ones heart, a bridge between external and internal, self and sentiment. According to the scholars in Turku, music was a secret force . . .between individuals which created sympathy, compassion, and sorrow—feelings attained within an individual and shared with others. The focus on individual feelings and the appeal of music to the human heart signal the beginning of Romanticism. The last part of the chapter is dedicated to sensuality and gender. A lecture On the Capability of the Fair Sex for Evaluating the Beautiful echoes the familiar European equation of femininity with excessive and even dangerous passion and desires, a threat to the morals of (male) society. 2.8 In a short concluding chapter on The Dynamics of the Body and the Soul, Sarjala summarizes the gradual realization of scholars, at the dawn of the Romantic era, that music represented the world; it did not transcend it (p. 238). Academic theses and lectures of the late seventeenth and the early eighteenth centuries propounded the law of music in human nature (p. 239), a notion that signaled the pre-Romantic era. 3. Conclusion 3.1 While much of
this monograph about the philosophy of music is necessarily abstract,
Sarjala sometimes invigorates it by exposing his readers to details of
life at the university—debates, procedures, events, curriculum and dissertation-writing—as
well as the overall intellectual and musical life of Turku. Sarjalas
prose is interspersed with passages from dissertations, lectures, and
records, cited in the context of mainstream philosophers and philosophical
doctrines. Although the author focuses primarily on musical discourse
rather than music itself, occasional references to specific events, such
as a 1795 performance of Pergolesis Stabat mater by a female ensemble
(p. 227), bring new light to the understanding of the culture of Turku.
More references of this sort would, perhaps, reveal how the tastes, musical
fashion, and the acquaintance of the public with the European repertory
related to theoretical views of the academic circles. The list of sources
and manuscripts following the seventh chapter should be valuable to scholars
in the field.
3.2 This monograph,
exploring the scientific construction of culture, morals, and gender in
relation to music, should attract scholars from a wide array of humanistic
and interdisciplinary areas: specialists on Baroque and pre-Romantic studies;
Finnish historians, musicologists, and philosophers; and scholars of Germanic
and Northern-European culture. The book is a tribute to the idea of the
power of music, an idea which has survived generations of changing philosophical,
social, and cultural constructs.
References *Inna Naroditskaya (in-narod@northwestern.edu
) is Assistant Professor of music at Northwestern University. Her research
interests include Soviet and post-Soviet musical cultures, as well as
Russian music of the early modern period during the reign of Elizabeth
and Catherine the Great.
Notes1. A Finnish city on the Baltic Sea, it was under the rule of the Swedish king Gustavus II Adolphus at the time when the Royal Academy was founded. 2. José Antonio Maravall, Culture of the Baroque: Analysis of a Historical Structure, Translated by Terry Cochran (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1986), 68. Copyright StatementCopyright © 2001 by the Society for Seventeenth-Century Music. All rights reserved. [1] Copyrights for individual items published in The Journal of Seventeenth-Century Music (JSCM) are held by their authors. Items appearing in JSCM may be saved and stored in electronic or paper form, and may be shared among individuals for purposes of scholarly research or discussion, but may not be republished in any form, electronic or print, without prior, written permission from the author(s), and advance notification of the editors of JSCM. [2] Any redistributed form of items published in JSCM must include the following information in a form appropriate to the medium in which the items are to appear:
[3] Libraries may archive issues of JSCM in electronic or paper form for public access so long as each issue is stored in its entirety, and no access fee is charged. Exceptions to these requirements must be approved in writing by the editors of JSCM, who will act in accordance with the decisions of the Society for Seventeenth-Century Music. [4] Citations to articles from JSCM should include the URL as found at the beginning of the article and the paragraph number; for example:
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