Literature DB >> 20219729

From sensibility to pathology: the origins of the idea of nervous music around 1800.

James Kennaway1.   

Abstract

Healing powers have been ascribed to music at least since David's lyre, but a systematic discourse of pathological music emerged only at the end of the eighteenth century. At that time, concerns about the moral threat posed by music were partly replaced by the idea that it could over-stimulate a vulnerable nervous system, leading to illness, immorality, and even death. During the Enlightenment, the relationship between the nerves and music was more often put in terms of refinement and sensibility than pathology. However, around 1800, this view was challenged by a medical critique of modern culture based on a model of the etiology of disease that saw stimulation as the principal cause of sickness. Music's belated incorporation into that critique was made possible by a move away from regarding music as an expression of cosmic and social order toward thinking of it as quasi-electrical stimulation, something that was intensified by the political and cultural changes unleashed by the French Revolution. For the next hundred and fifty years, nervousness caused by musical stimulation was often regarded as a fully fledged Zivilisationskrankheit, widely discussed in psychiatry, music criticism, and literature.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20219729      PMCID: PMC3935440          DOI: 10.1093/jhmas/jrq004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hist Med Allied Sci        ISSN: 0022-5045            Impact factor:   2.088


  7 in total

1.  A woman down to her bones. The anatomy of sexual difference in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.

Authors:  Michael Stolberg
Journal:  Isis       Date:  2003-06       Impact factor: 0.688

2.  [Not Available].

Authors:  U Niewöhner-Desbordes
Journal:  Wurzbg Medizinhist Mitt       Date:  1994

3.  Irritating experiments. Haller's concept and the European controversy on irritability and sensibility, 1750-90.

Authors:  Hubert Steinke
Journal:  Clio Med       Date:  2005

4.  Science and the discovery of the imagination in Enlightened England.

Authors:  G S Rousseau
Journal:  Eighteenth Century Stud       Date:  1969

5.  The quest for certainty in medicine: John Brown's system of medicine in France.

Authors:  G B Risse
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  1971 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 1.314

6.  Models of the nervous system in eighteenth century psychiatry.

Authors:  E T Carlson; M M Simpson
Journal:  Bull Hist Med       Date:  1969 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 1.314

7.  [Note on the history of imaginary fluids. (The animal spirit of libido)].

Authors:  J Starobinski
Journal:  Gesnerus       Date:  1966
  7 in total
  2 in total

1.  The piano plague: the nineteenth-century medical critique of female musical education.

Authors:  James Kennaway
Journal:  Gesnerus       Date:  2011

2.  Stimulating Music: The Pleasures and Dangers of "Electric Music," 1750-1900.

Authors:  James Kennaway
Journal:  Configurations       Date:  2011
  2 in total

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