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Music, Healing and Sickness in Spas and Fashionable Georgian Society

  • James Kennaway
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Bade- und Kurmusik
This chapter is in the book Bade- und Kurmusik

Abstract

This chapter looks at the relationship between music, health and disease in the British spa culture of the Georgian era, when it experienced its Golden Age in places such as Bath, Brighton and Buxton. In eighteenth-century Britain, as elsewhere in Europe, it was widely believed that nervous complaints in particular could be treated using music. However, like spas, music was also associated with elite vice, luxury and disease. Looking at contemporary correspondence, diaries, journalism and literature, this chapter aims to show how, along with the discourse of music as a suitable accompaniment of benign natural healing, there was a parallel discussion of music as a symbol of excess and fakery. Crucially, music came to be seen more often as a cause of nervous disease, rather than as a cure. Instead of being viewed as a sign of order and politeness, it became understood as a form of nerve stimulation that could be dangerous if carried too far.

Abstract

This chapter looks at the relationship between music, health and disease in the British spa culture of the Georgian era, when it experienced its Golden Age in places such as Bath, Brighton and Buxton. In eighteenth-century Britain, as elsewhere in Europe, it was widely believed that nervous complaints in particular could be treated using music. However, like spas, music was also associated with elite vice, luxury and disease. Looking at contemporary correspondence, diaries, journalism and literature, this chapter aims to show how, along with the discourse of music as a suitable accompaniment of benign natural healing, there was a parallel discussion of music as a symbol of excess and fakery. Crucially, music came to be seen more often as a cause of nervous disease, rather than as a cure. Instead of being viewed as a sign of order and politeness, it became understood as a form of nerve stimulation that could be dangerous if carried too far.

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Vorwort V
  3. Inhaltsverzeichnis VII
  4. Musicobalneologische Streiflichter. Eine Einführung IX
  5. I. Allegorien und Assoziationen
  6. Das Bad als Metapher und die Konfiguration Singen im Bad bei Walther von der Vogelweide, Marcabru, Neidhart und Konrad von Würzburg 1
  7. Von Singbad und Badzech. Das Bad und der Meistergesang 33
  8. Musik und Bad an den Grenzen bildlicher Darstellbarkeit. Betrachtungen anhand von Holzschnitten und Gemälden des 15. und 16. Jahrhunderts 61
  9. Venus im Bad 91
  10. II. Singen und Klingen
  11. Singen im Bade 137
  12. Klang-, Heilungs- und Heilsraum Pfeffersbad im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert 165
  13. Doctores, Mores, Lust und Kuertzweyl. Musik im Bad am Beginn der Frühen Neuzeit? 185
  14. aes thermarum: eine Bestandsaufnahme Musikinstrumente des alten Rom im Spiegel des Humanismus 215
  15. „Wollt ihr nit baden?“ Hintergründe einer Vorszene: Zum ersten Bild in Carl Orffs Die Bernauerin 239
  16. III. Kulturen und Traditionen
  17. Music, Healing and Sickness in Spas and Fashionable Georgian Society 267
  18. Jüdische Kurgäste und Kurkapellen in der Frühen Neuzeit 283
  19. Die Rolle von Musik, Tanz und Musizierenden in der Konstruktion des teutschen Kurortes als Heterotopie im langen 18. Jahrhundert 297
  20. Bad Pyrmont. Der hyllige Born und die Musik 329
  21. IV. Literarische Badbezüge
  22. Badekultur im Spätmittelalter. Balneologische Erotik und Hygiene in Märe, Lied, Brief, Schwank und im Bild 355
  23. Literarische und musikalische Unterhaltung in Jean Pauls Kur-Satire Dr. Katzenbergers Badereise 383
  24. Abbildungsnachweise 397
  25. Personenregister 405
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