The Music of Theology
Language – Space – Silence
Mattias Martinson author Laurens ten Kate author Andrew Hass author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publishing:27th Jun '25
£42.99
This title is due to be published on 27th June, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£145.00(9780367902445)

This book reconceives theology as a musical endeavour in critical tension with language, space and silence. An Overture first moves us from music to religion, and then from theology back to music – a circularity that, drawing upon history, sociology, phenomenology, and philosophy, disclaims any theology of music and instead pursues the music in theology. The chapters that follow explore the three central themes by way of theory, music and myth: Adorno, Benjamin and Deleuze (language), Derrida, Rosa and Nancy (space), Schelling/Hegel, Homer and Cage (silence). In overdubbing each other, these chapters work towards theology as a sonorous rhythm between loss and freedom. A Coda provides three brief musical examples – Thomas Tallis, György Ligeti, and Evan Parker – as manifestations of this rhythm, to show in summary how music becomes the very pulse of theology, and theology the very intuition of music. The authors offer an interdisciplinary engagement addressing fundamental questions of the self and the other, of humanity and the divine, in a deconstruction of modern culture and of its bias towards the eye over the ear. The book harmonizes three scholarly voices who attempt to find where the resonance of our Western conceptions and practice, musically and theologically, might resound anew as a more expansive music of theology.
Three distinguished philosophical critics of religion orchestrate their voices in exquisite descriptions that restitute the uncanny capacity of music to express the inner melody and rhythm of life and thought and feeling. Learned reconstruction of the unique role of music in the history of culture enables the logos of theos to sound its intimate, incarnate vibration between sensation and contemplation, echoing remote Orphic and Pythagorean origins. Rich and unprecedented. Sublime and moving as only music can be. Thought-provoking by making thought itself dissolve into musical keys at its core that have become inaudible since the silencing of the sacred in a religiously tone-deaf society. A powerfully innovative, positive antiphonal response to theologies of the death of God. The book succeeds resonantly in making theology again sound its openness to “our ineffable whole.”
- William Franke, Professor of Comparative Literature, Vanderbilt University, France
ISBN: 9781032702773
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 453g
184 pages