Death is an unanswerable question for humanity, the question that always remains unanswered because it lies beyond human experience. Music represents one of the most profound ways in which humanity struggles, nevertheless, to accommodate death within the scope of the living by giving a voice to death and the dead and a voice that responds. This book engages with the question of how music expresses and responds to the profound existential disturbance that death and loss present to the living. Each chapter offers readers an encounter with music as a way of speaking or responding to human mortality. Each chapter, in its own way, addresses these questions: How are death and the dead made present to us through music? How does music, as composed, performed and heard, respond to the brute fact of death for the living, the dying and the bereaved? These questions are addressed from a wide range of disciplinary perspectives: musicology, ethnomusicology, literature, history, philosophy, film studies, psychology and psychoanalysis. Singing Death also covers a wide range of musical genres from medieval love song to twenty-first-century horror film music. The collection is accompanied by a website including some of the music associated with each of its chapters.
About the Author: Helen Dell is a Research Fellow in the School of Culture and Communication, University of Melbourne. Her main area of research is medieval song. Her PhD thesis was published by Boydell & Brewer in 2008 as Desire by Gender and Genre in Trouvère Song. A recent focus has been the nexus between music and death. Recent publications include 'Music Medievalism and the Harmony of the Spheres', Cambridge Companion to Medievalism, 2016; 'Haunting Music: Hearing the Voices of the Dead', Music and Mourning, Routledge, 2016, and 'The Medieval Voice', Since Lacan: Papers of the Freudian School of Melbourne, 25, Karnac, 2016.
Helen M. Hickey is a researcher with the Australian Research Council Centre for the History of Emotions and the School of Culture and Communication, University of Melbourne. Her research encompasses medieval poetics, histories of early medicine, and material culture. She has publications on the inquisitions of insanity in medieval poetry, medical diagnosis in early modern England, and grass-roots medievalism in the Labor movement in Australian culture. Recent European research has focused on the cult of the relic of La sainte larme (the Holy Tear) in France and ophthalmological miracles. She is a member of the International Health Humanities Network.