MUSIC AS SILENCE: SCHÖNBERG, NONO, AND THE POLITICS OF EXPERIENCE Cover Image

MUSIC AS SILENCE: SCHÖNBERG, NONO, AND THE POLITICS OF EXPERIENCE
MUSIC AS SILENCE: SCHÖNBERG, NONO, AND THE POLITICS OF EXPERIENCE

Author(s): Peter Nelson
Subject(s): Philosophy, Fine Arts / Performing Arts, Music, Aesthetics
Published by: Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai
Keywords: Schönberg; Nono; Agamben; Anthropocene; experience; silence;

Summary/Abstract: Arnold Schönberg and Luigi Nono stand as emblems for a certain sort of difficulty in music, a difficulty charted by Schönberg himself in his essay, “How One Becomes Lonely.” But this “difficulty” may have a purpose for us, at this time, either intended or unintended. Here I approach the “difficult” music of these two composers through the concept of experience, as described and discussed by Giorgio Agamben. Agamben’s thesis concerning the formation of human subjects through a process of infancy is outlined, and related to the work of these two specific composers, in order to think about the place and function of music in a noisy world: what possibilities does this particular, “difficult” music hold for us, now, in the middle of multiple and ongoing, existential and planetary crises?

  • Issue Year: 70/2025
  • Issue No: Sp.Issue 3
  • Page Range: 141-150
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: English
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