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dc.contributor.authorMAISONNEUVE, Sophie
dc.date.accessioned2021-05-21T10:03:14Z
dc.date.available2021-05-21T10:03:14Z
dc.date.issued2000
dc.identifier.citationQuaderni storici, 2000, Vol. 35, No. 2, pp. 437-467en
dc.identifier.issn0301-6307
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/71320
dc.descriptionFirst published: August 2000en
dc.description.abstractIn Great Britain, the interwar years were a period of rapid expansion of the record market and related amateur practices. While it had originally been conceived for administrative and pedagogical purposes, the gramophone became at that time an important medium for music. Not being a curiosity any longer, it became a musical instrument for performing music and listening to it. This change is supported by many discussions and by the creation of several forums, such as gramophone societies and specialized periodicals. This paper discusses the role of these various forms of sociability in shaping the use of the new medium together with a new relationship to music. This evolution can be depicted as the development of an aural way of listening to music resulting in the birth of a new listener. Analysing the various forms of sociability involved in this phenomenon leads the author to tackle the issue of gender and to replace the significance of this se to practices into the broader tradition of music socializing.en
dc.language.isoit
dc.publisherSocieta Editrice Il Mulinoen
dc.relation.ispartofQuaderni storicien
dc.titleDischi e socialità : la nuova cultura dell'ascolto musicale negli anni venti e trenta del novecento
dc.title.alternativeThe constitution of a new musical culture and of a new way of listening to music in the 1920s and 1930s : considering the record and forms of sociability attached to it as agents of cultural change
dc.typeArticle
dc.identifier.doi10.1408/10288
dc.identifier.volume35
dc.identifier.startpage437
dc.identifier.endpage467
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dc.identifier.issue2


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