
The Philosopher’s Touch: Sartre, Nietzsche, and Barthes at the Piano
Author(s): François Noudelmann (Author), Brian Reilly (Translator)
- Publisher: Columbia University Press
- Publication Date: January 3, 2012
- Language: English
- Print length: 176 pages
- ISBN-10: 0231153945
- ISBN-13: 9780231153942
Book Description
Noudelmann positions the physical and theoretical practice of music as a dimension underpinning and resonating with Sartre's, Nietzsche's, and Barthes's unique philosophical outlook. By reading their thought against their music, he introduces new critical formulations and reorients their trajectories, adding invaluable richness to these philosophers' lived and embodied experiences. The result heightens the multiple registers of being and the relationship between philosophy and the senses that informed so much of their work. A careful reader of music, Noudelmann maintains an elegant command of the texts under his gaze and appreciates the discursive points of musical and philosophical scholarship they involve, especially with regard to recent research and cutting-edge critique.
Editorial Reviews
Review
Amateur pianist and philosopher François Noudelmann was jolted into action when he saw a video of Sartre at the piano. Like a recurring traumatic flashback, the Sartrean performance touches off a series of reflections on the covert practices of three highly attuned thinkers. The relation to music, private and protected, offers another register by which to read the unsayable in the imposing works of Jean-Paul Sartre, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Roland Barthes. Ever vying with language for sovereignty, music disrupts the implacable habits of linguistic positing and delivers these exemplary writers to the scene of their greatest vulnerability. -- Avital Ronell, New York University and the European Graduate School, author of
The Test Drive and Finitude's Score: Essays for the End of the MilleniumAn elegant ode to the emotional and intellectual importance of music and solitude.Publishers WeeklyPublishers Weekly ―
Publishers Weeklya remarkable and revealing book. ―
Library JournalNoudelmann's book is musically sophisticated and informed by deep knowledge of thepiano...This little book is a unique chapter in the aesthetics of thepiano, and serves as a wonderful opening beat for a suite of others to follow. -- Daniel Herwitz ―
Notre Dame Philosophical Review...essays that pique the reader's interest, rather than bludgeoning it. -- Scott McLemee ―
Inside Higher EdThe book probes the meanings of these elective affinities, and speculates on both the yawning gaps and hidden passageways between intellectual and corporeal pleasures, the travails of the mind and the secret life of the fingers. -- Jeremy Eichler ―
Boston GlobeA musical reverie, a meditation, best if savoured slowly. -- Cynthia Peck ―
The Vienna Review of BooksIn today's philosophical culture, where thinkers seem to have succumbed to a fashion of soulless scholasticism, the significance of an invigorating book like Noudelmann's is difficult to overestimate. -- Costica Bradatan ―
The European LegacyWhether in a text that is scholarly or meditative, and whether, as Barthes put it in
S/Z, a text is 'readerly' or 'writerly', music and letters never did comfortably embrace each other, for all that we need them to. Kudos to Noudelmann for offering something expertly imaginative, trying to meet that need. ― Music and LettersAbout the Author
Brian J. Reilly is visiting assistant professor of French literature at Johns Hopkins University.
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