Speaking, Stammering, Singing, Shouting : A Social History of the Modern Voice
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
Book Series
Sound in History
ISBN-10
1512827738
ISBN-13
9781512827736
Publisher
University of Pennsylvania Press
Imprint
University of Pennsylvania Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Jul 22nd, 2025
Print length
280 Pages
Ksh 10,100.00
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What was considered a good, normal, or healthy voice in the nineteenth century? In 1854, singing master Manuel Garcia became the first person to see the vocal cords at work in a human throat. Less than a decade later, surgeon Paul Broca identified what he called a speech center in the brain. The almost simultaneous invention of the laryngoscope and the discovery of Broca's area present important turning points for how medical, musical, and other experts understood how the human voice works. These developments did not occur in a vacuum, however. In Speaking, Stammering, Singing, Shouting, Josephine Hoegaerts describes the ambitious attempts, throughout the nineteenth century, to observe, understand, and manage human voices, as well as the host of more traditional, domestic, and stereotypical beliefs about the voice that continued to exist alongside these new insights. She peers into the stammering therapist's office, over the singing teacher's shoulder, and occasionally into the laryngoscope to see how something so simple—the sound Europeans produced when they opened their mouths—changed over the course of the nineteenth century. Combining insights from medical and musical histories with methods from the fields of sound studies and the history of experience, Hoegaerts traces how people imagined human voices in the nineteenth century and how they used them. Rather than focusing on the great singers and orators of the age, the book looks at the mundane daily practices of singers, speakers, and stammerers and the people who trained and studied them. What did it take, according to all these increasingly specialized professionals, to have a normal voice in nineteenth-century Europe?
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