On successful completion of the module, students will be able to:
1 demonstrate an advanced understanding of the place and significance of music in Victorian culture, and of key events and themes in the musical history of this period
2 apply high-level historical, critical, and comparative methodologies to the study of selected examples of Victorian musical culture.
3 apply an advanced understanding of how developments in Victorian musical culture reflect aspects of the Victorian period.
4 demonstrate self-direction and originality in a sophisticated extended argument that uses a suitably wide range of evidence/illustrations for a 6,000-word essay, and also engages with contextual and critical literature.
‘We have the continental reputation of being the Great Unmusical Power of Europe – strong enough in commerce and steam, but devoid of musical talent, invention, and discrimination’ (F.J. Crowest, 1881)
In music-history texts, if it is discussed at all, Victorian Britain is regarded as a musical wasteland – literally as ‘a land without music’. Searching in vain for a ‘British Beethoven’, critics conclude that (i) Victorian Britain was essentially an import culture, and (ii) that nothing of interest happened among native musicians until the sudden flowering of compositional talent epitomised by Elgar and his contemporaries in the closing decade of the century. Historians similarly have tended to marginalise Victorian music in their accounts of the period, though generally eager to acknowledge British achievements in literature, and the decorative and visual arts.
Recently, however, this received opinion has come under scrutiny: just how ‘unmusical’ was Britain in the Victorian era, and what were the peculiar cultural and ideological currents that brought about the experience of a ‘musical renaissance’ at the end of the period? As this module will show, music was central to the public and private lives of the Victorians. It provided a soundtrack to state and civic ceremony, worship, recreation, and courtship, and it both reinforced and was shaped by the prevailing ideological currents of the time. Music helped to articulate the Victorian imperial world-view, and offered a medium through which the Empire could assimilate the different cultures subsumed within it. A forum for self-improvement, conspicuous consumption, and gender/class demarcation, music offered a rich vein of symbolism to the writers and painters of the period.
Six key themes in the musical life of the Victorians are highlighted in the seminars that constitute this module. Students are not required to have any previous musical training, but must be willing to engage with sound recordings and other musical sources as part of their research. Attendance at appropriate musical performances will also be encouraged.
Students taking this module will already have taken seminars for VICM 2225. Once they have upgraded to VICM 2625, they will be allowed an additional 45 minutes of individual tutorial time. This time may be used in a combination of different ways (e.g. face-to-face discussion, e-mail consultations) as appropriate to the individual student. Students will be required to submit a proposal to register for the module, and encouraged to submit drafts for feedback before final submission.
Tutorial
Contact hours: 45 mins
Intended Group size: 1