Abstract
AbstractThe rise of new musicology and feminist music criticism in the 1980s prompted a rethinking of gender in Australian art music spheres and resulted in over a decade of advocacy on behalf of women music makers. Local musicological publications began to cover feminist concerns from the late 1980s, with a focus on composing women. Catalysed by the proliferation of feminist musicology internationally in the 1990s, a series of women's music festivals were held around Australia from 1991–2001 and accompanied by conferences, symposia and special-issue publications. Aesthetic concerns were at the forefront of this debate as women musicologists and practitioners were divided on the existence of a gendered aesthetic and the implications this might have. This article examines the major feminist aesthetic contributions and debates at the time and how these considerations have impacted music-making practices, with particular reference to women composers of new music.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference6 articles.
1. From the “Horses Mouths”: Is There a Woman's Musical Aesthetic? Yea or Neigh?;Boyd;Sounds Australian: The Journal of the Australian Music Centre,1993
2. Is There a Woman's Aesthetic in Musical Composition?;Beilharz;Sounds Australian: The Journal of the Australian Music Centre,1993
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