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9 - Did Women Have a Classical Style?

from Part III - Women Composers circa 1750–1880

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2024

Matthew Head
Affiliation:
King's College London
Susan Wollenberg
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
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Summary

The extraordinary growth of scholarship on women composers in recent decades inspires not only female inclusion in traditionally all-male historical narratives but also reappraisal of the period styles that structure those narratives. Does the music of women composers follow patterns of change enshrined in such heirloom categories of music history as Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, Classical, and Romantic? What is the critical potential of women’s work as composers for rewriting music-historical surveys? With the music of around 400 female composers of the eighteenth century now known to survive, the field is established for the appraisal of women composers’ relationship to the Classical period, and the ‘Viennese Classical Style’ associated with it.1

The formerly dependable terms invoked thus far – period, Classical, Viennese, and style – deserve rethinking.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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References

Further Reading

Godt, Irving. Marianna Martines: A Woman Composer in the Vienna of Mozart and Haydn, ed. with contributions by Rice, John A. (Rochester: University of Rochester Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Head, Matthew. Sovereign Feminine: Music and Gender in Eighteenth-Century Germany (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Jackson, Barbara Garvey. ‘Say Can You Deny Me’: A Guide to Surviving Music by Women from the 16th through the 18th Centuries (Fayetteville, NC: University of Arkansas Press, 1994).Google Scholar
Morgan, Elizabeth. ‘The Accompanied Sonata and the Domestic Novel in Britain at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century’, 19th-Century Music, 36/2 (2012), 88110.Google Scholar
Wollenberg, Susan. ‘Barthélémon [married name Henslow], Cecilia Maria’, ODNB (2004).Google Scholar

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