TIA DENORA

'Tia DeNora' is Professor of Sociology of Music and Director of Research, in the Department of Sociology/Philosophy at the University of Exeter. [1]

Contents
Biography
Publications
Criticism
References

Biography


DeNora's undergraduate studies were in music and sociology. She completed her PhD in Sociology in 1989 at the University of California San Diego. From then until 1992, she worked at University of Wales Cardiff (where DeNora was a University of Wales Fellow from 1989-1991). DeNora moved to Exeter in 1992. DeNora was Chair of the European Sociological Association Network on Sociology of the Arts from 1999-2001 and is a Vice President of the International Sociological Association Research Committee on Sociology of the Arts. She was an elected member of the Council of the American Sociological Association Section on Science, Knowledge and Technology from 1994-1997 and is currently on the Council of the American Sociological Association Culture Section (until 2008). With Pete Martin, she has co-edited the Manchester University Press series, Music and Society.

Publications


''Beethoven and the Construction of Genius: Musical Politics in Vienna 1792-1803'', Berkley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press, 1995.

''Music in Everyday Life'', Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000.

''After Adorno: Rethinking Music Sociology'', Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003.
''Musical Consciousness'', Poetics: Journal of Empirical Research on Literature, the Media and the Arts, 2001 (July), with W.R. Witkin, editor.
:(Honorable Mention, American Sociological Association Culture Section Book Prize, 2005)
Criticism

Pianist and musicologist Charles Rosen rebutted ''Beethoven and the Construction of Genius'' in an article "Did Beethoven Have All the Luck?" in which he challenges DeNora's assumptions by insisting that we do indeed know many if not most of the works of Beethoven's contemporaries; that many have been analyzed, revived and recorded; and that they do not approach Beethoven's originality, breadth of thought, or structural sophistication. [2]

References



1.
Department of Sociology and Philosophy, University of Exeter, U.K., Tia DeNora
2.
Did Beethoven Have All the Luck?, Charles Rosen, , , The New York Review of Books,



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