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    Ornette Coleman, Psychoanalysis, Discourse: Movements in Harmolodic Space

    Ornette Coleman, Psychoanalysis, Discourse by James, A. L.;

    Movements in Harmolodic Space

    Series: The Lines of the Symbolic in Psychoanalysis Series;

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    Estimated delivery time: In stock at the publisher, but not at Prospero's office. Delivery time approx. 3-5 weeks.
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    Product details:

    • Edition number 1
    • Publisher Routledge
    • Date of Publication 29 November 2024

    • ISBN 9781032534848
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages172 pages
    • Size 234x156 mm
    • Weight 320 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 42 Illustrations, black & white; 29 Halftones, black & white; 13 Line drawings, black & white
    • 666

    Categories

    Short description:

    Ornette Coleman, Psychoanalysis, Discourse develops tools from psychoanalysis for the analysis of Ornette Coleman's discourse.

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    Long description:

    Ornette Coleman, Psychoanalysis, Discourse develops tools from psychoanalysis for the analysis of Ornette Coleman's discourse.


    In this psychoanalytic, philosophical and musical meditation on what it means to follow, A. L. James presents an approach to the analysis of discourse that is a kind of listening for listening ? an attempt to discern in and between the lines of Coleman's speech the implication of new ways to listen, new ways to experience Coleman?s music as movement and space ? as Movements in Harmolodic Space. Each chapter of this book is oriented with respect to fragments from Coleman?s discourse, dealing with a piece, or collection of pieces, from Coleman?s work, with particular attention to the implication of relations and relationality. Insofar as Coleman?s discourse about his work also contains allusions to fields beyond music, it develops tools that draw elements and structures from these fields together, finding in their relation echoes and parallels.


    Ornette Coleman, Psychoanalysis, Discourse will be of great interest to psychoanalysts, musicians, and musicologists. It will be relevant for academics and scholars of psychoanalytic and Lacanian studies, music, and cultural studies.



    ?A. L. James's brilliant and uncompromising book presents a rigorous and unheard-of way of interrogating the music of Ornette Coleman. It takes its cue from a remark made by Charlie Haden, which becomes the point of departure for a highly speculative journey towards a definition ? in logical, topological, and musicological terms ? of what it means to 'follow' in music. In the best tradition of continental theory, A. L. James lends a psychoanalytical and philosophical ear to the most banal and yet mysterious ? the most enigmatically obvious ? details in a musician?s discourse about his music.? Peter Szendy, David Herlihy Professor of Comparative Literature and Humanities at Brown University


    ?In this brilliant technical analysis, A. L. James's harmolodic work of love follows Ornette Coleman in precisely the way he demanded of his fellow musicians, by tracking the movement of the sonic ?galma that both encapsulates and displaces the solitude of the Idea in the space of free difference.? Scott Wilson, author of Scott Walker and the Song of the One-all-alone (Bloomsbury) and Stop Making Sense: Music from the Perspective of the Real (Routledge).

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    Table of Contents:

    Acknowledgements


    Series Preface


    Preface     


                   


    I.          What does it mean to follow?                                   


    II.        Transference                                   


    III.       ?No one knew where to go?                                                                         


    IV.       Invisible                                                                                             


    V.         Lonely Woman (Solitude)                                                                          


    VI.       Lonely Woman (no relation)                                                                       


    VII.      Skies of America


    VIII.    Conclusion: what does it mean to follow?                                                                                                                                                            


    Appendix        


    Bibliography              

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