会话,“Sperrits”和自演奏手风琴

C. Raz
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在维多利亚时代的伦敦,手风琴是招魂者聚会的必修课。由苏格兰裔美国人丹尼尔·邓格拉斯·霍姆(Daniel Dunglas Home, 1833 - 1886)引进的,是那个时代最著名的媒介,这种乐器通常用来在没有表演者的帮助下制作音乐(我称之为“精神手风琴”)。这篇文章试图解释为什么手风琴开始捕捉到19世纪唯心主义者群体的想象力。它通过重建这种乐器所处的听觉文化,依靠科学著作、大众媒体,以及通灵论者和怀疑论者的声音体验来实现这一目标。通灵论者认为精神手风琴发出的是来自其他世界的空灵音调,而怀疑论者则认为同样的声音是刺耳的吱吱声。这篇文章将手风琴和它在18世纪的神经生理学理论联系在一起,追溯了精神手风琴的各种音乐前辈,认为霍姆对这种乐器的精明选择代表了下一个世界,反映了特定文化符号的交集。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Séances, “Sperrits,” and Self-Playing Accordions
The accordion was the stalwart staple of spiritualist encounters in Victorian London. Introduced into séances by the Scottish American Daniel Dunglas Home (1833–86), the most celebrated medium of the era, the instrument was typically used to produce music without the visible aid of a performer (what I call the “spirit accordian”). This article seeks to explain why the accordion came to capture the imagination of the nineteenth-century spiritualist community. It does so by reconstructing the auditory culture in which the instrument was embedded, relying on scientific writings, the popular press, and the sonic experiences of both the spiritualists, who heard the spirit accordion as emitting the ethereal tones of other worlds, and the skeptics, who described the same sounds as grating squeaks. Linking the instrument and its role in the séance to eighteenth-century theories of neurophysiology, the article traces the spirit accordion’s various musical predecessors, arguing that Home’s canny selection of the instrument to represent the next world reflected the intersection of specific cultural signifiers.
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