An account of nineteenth-century music in Atlantic worlds told through
the history of the art's elemental medium, the air.
Often experienced as universal and incorporeal, music seems an innocent
art form. The air, the very medium by which music constitutes itself,
shares with music a claim to invisibility. In Creatures of the Air, J.
Q. Davies interrogates these claims, tracing the history of music's
elemental media system in nineteenth-century Atlantic worlds. He posits
that air is a poetic domain, and music is an art of that domain.
From West Central African ngombi harps to the European J. S. Bach
revival, music expressed elemental truths in the nineteenth century.
Creatures of the Air tells these truths through stories about
suffocation and breathing, architecture and environmental design,
climate strife, and racial turmoil. Contributing to elemental media
studies, the energy humanities, and colonial histories, Davies shows how
music, no longer just an innocent luxury, is implicated in the struggle
for control over air as a precious natural resource. What emerges is a
complex political ecology of the global nineteenth century and beyond.