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Music in culture and society
Music in culture and society
Music in cultural identity
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The stories that lock together to make up The Gold Bug Variations are held together by common threads. One of those threads is the art of music. Several of the characters are heavily influenced by the melodies and harmonies that arise from the different scenes. The selection that I chose to dive deeper into and explore the many connections that music has to offer is from Variation III, section heading: "We Are Climbing Jacob's Latter." The particular part that grabbed my interest was the reference to Elvis changing the meaning of "Aura Lee" by releasing his variation of the song titled "Love Me Tender."
The section starts by Ressler entering the state of Illinois in 1957. He is coming to the state in order to start researching the code behind the science of Genetics. Up until this point Ressler had very little experience with music, knowledge that is made clear by his social interactions with his future coworkers and their families at the gathering. The passage on page 49 spells it out when it says that Ressler is "musically illiterate." This is given validity through the conversation between Ressler and Dr. Botkin in which Dr. Botkin makes reference to the "machine responsible for the apotheosis of Beethoven's Diabelli" and "the transcendent Opus 109 set." The machine that she is referring to is the piano, a fact that Ressler is unaware of due to his lack of understanding of the topic.
In attempt to clarify his lack of knowledge Ressler "buys a record player that folds up into a box." It is apparent that he is apprehensive to buy the record player, not only due to his frugality, but he is
worried about his genetic mutation of being tone-deaf. Ressler recalls that "he inherited what is physiologically ref...
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...h research that the Crux of the heart is the area of the junction of the walls of the four chambers of the heart. This was a truly "Ressler" observation, Ressler is the only man I know that could use his mind that is set in genetics and biology and apply it to a spiritual song and come out right. The research that I came up with also triggered a variation of the four chambers of the heart.
The four chambers of the heart link perfectly to the aria's four notes and to the four amino acids in genetics: A,C,T,and G. Those amino acids spring forth into the music of The Goldberg Variations due to the fact that it is the repetition of those core four notes that make up each variation as well as A,C,T, and G make up the variations of the human race. It is only fitting that Ressler saw the Crux of the heart, biology within music, and the biology within storytelling.
Through this, the reader understands that the author has an advanced amount of knowledge on the subject she will be covering throughout the novel. Feeling as if there will be no need to question her findings or conclusions (due to her vast educational background and the research she put in), the audience is much more susceptible and therefore predisposed to Ehrenreich’s arguments, making it easier for her to make her case.
At this time in history, those who were deaf were tried at best to be converted into hearing people. Doctors, speech therapists, and audiologists all recommended the use of speaking and lip reading instead of sign language. Since Mark’s grandparents were hearing, they were closer to the parental position instead of his deaf parents. His grandparents provided him with the best possible education he could get, startin...
The book, Deaf Again, written by Mark Drolsbaugh, is an autobiography telling his life story which starts with a young boy growing up who goes through the process of losing his hearing and then, as he gets older, he struggles with trying to fit in as a normal child. When Mark was very young, he could hear fairly well then gradually he went hard of hearing until he eventually went completely deaf. Even though he had two deaf parents, the doctors advised speech therapy and hearing aids because they did not understand Deaf Culture and they thought that Mark would be a lot happier if he could hang on to his hearing persona. Throughout the rest of the book, Mark goes through a lot of stages of trying to fit in with everyone and eventually does find himself and realizes that being Deaf is not a disease, but just a part of who he is.
One of them being the aunt of a friend of Ehrenreich’s named Caroline. Caroline went through a real-life version of the hypothetical situation Ehrenreich created for herself for the experiment. At first Caroline had a good job and lived in New Jersey with her husband and kids, until she decided to leave her husband and move into her mother’s home with her kids in tow. She then moved to Florida when transportation to her job became too difficult for her to manage. In Florida, she got a job at a hotel cleaning rooms as well as the news that she had diabetes. It was also in Florida that Caroline eventually met a man who she got married to, this marriage, however, didn’t end her any troubles as she still has a low-paying job and children that she must take care of. It is these types of people that Ehrenreich encounters during her experiment. People who have experienced the middle-class lifestyle in the past and are now forced to join the working-class. Families who, although employed, are at the brink of scarcity and debt because of their extremely low wages. Since the audience is most likely part of the middle-class themselves, the reading of others’ very similar experiences can cause a feeling of fear to envelop within them, emphasizing the hardship that many people like Caroline go through in the United States;
Lane, Harlan (1992). “Cochlear Implants are Wrong for Young Deaf Children.” Viewpoints on Deafness. Ed. Mervin D. Garretson. National Association of the Deaf, Silver Spring, MD. 89-92.
of the heart: one chamber is on the top and one chamber is on the
This work is directly inspired by Der Blaue Reiter Almanach. Primarily a work of prose, it consisted of plays, essays by leading artists and musicians detailing works of the era, and commentary on art, music, theater, and related subjects. The Brooklyn Rider Almanac is conceptually a modern recreation of this idea in music, in that musicians are providing a commentary of artists or their work through their music. In a way, The Brooklyn Rider Almanac approaches the idea of cross-disciplinary art from an opposite prospective as the Onomatopoetic Project. Many of the works presented during the concert as a part of The Brooklyn Rider Almanac were inspired by looking an artistic muse or idea as an inspiration to create music that reflects the muse. Artists from classically trained composers to jazz and rock musicians contributed to this collection of works, and the results are both fascinating and inspiring. One great example of this is Necessary…Henry by Albanian Cellist Rubin Kodheli. Inspired by the jazz musician Henry Threadgill, this work incorporates the styles of rock musicians like Jimi Hendrix into and what could be perceived as the farthest possible medium from rock: the string quartet. Like Threadgill’s earlier use of non-jazz instrumentation and ideas in jazz works, Kodheli uses sounds from the rock genre like virtuosic guitar-like riffs, rock groves, and highly
Chua, John. "An overview of 'The Tell-Tale Heart,'." Gale Online Encyclopedia. Detroit: Gale, 2010. Literature Resources from Gale. Web. 7 Dec. 2010.
In mm. 54-56 Mahler's purpose to create not only a harmonic and rhythmic but also a timbral complexity is once again observed. A very quiet, almost "masked" dissonance is created which is again brief but so often evident.
The heart serves as a powerful function in the human body through two main jobs. It pumps oxygen-rich blood throughout the body and “blood vessels called coronary arteries that carry oxygenated blood straight into the heart muscle” (Katzenstein and Pinã, 2). There are four chambers and valves inside the heart that “help regulate the flow of blood as it travels through the heart’s chambers and out to the lungs and body” (Katzenstein Pinã, 2). Within the heart there is the upper chamber known as the atrium (atria) and the lower chamber known as the ventricles. “The atrium receive blood from the lu...
The character that I will be doing a case study on is Jacob Singer from the 1990’s film, “Jacob’s Ladder”. Jacob is a war veteran who suffers from severe trauma that was caused by both his traumatic experiences from Vietnam and the death of his son, Gabe. Jacob lost his son right before he was drafted into the Vietnam War and did not have time to grieve his death.
this is his normal. By having down syndrome, it usually comes with learning and speech
Hearing loss can affect a child dramatically in their early development. It is important to be aware and cautious of noticing signs towards possible hearing loss, because language and communication skills deve...
National Institute of Health. (2011). National Institute on Deafness and other communication disorders: Improving the lives of people who have communication disorders. National Institute on
The researcher found that the “effects of the early acquisition of ASL include an increased role for the right hemisphere and for parietal cortex and this occurs in both hearing and deaf” (“Neural Systems Mediating American Sign Language: Effects of Sensory Experience and Age of Acquisition.”) individuals, and this serves for a better cognitive performance. As Sam Berdy, who is also Deaf, said, “There are two worlds: the deaf world and the hearing world. There are some people in the deaf community that feel that hearing people look down on us” (“Deaf Quotes.”). With this quote, the researcher found a term that supported the above information; which is ‘audism’. Audism is “the notion that one is superior based on one's ability to hear” and “the belief that life without hearing is futile and miserable, that hearing loss is a tragedy and "the scourge of mankind," and that deaf people should struggle to be as much like hearing people as possible” (“Audism.”). The researcher’s founded term fit the study, helped prove that there are negative stigmas aimed at Deaf culture, and showed the researcher that education about Deaf culture and its language could delete terms like audism, deaf-and-dumb, and many