New In Print: “What is the Sound of One Hand Playing?” in Rhetoric Society Quarterly

Excited to share this new essay, “What is the Sound of One Hand Playing: Aural Body Rhetoric in the Music of Horace Parlan and Paul Wittgenstein,” co-authored with Bill Heinze in Rhetoric Society Quarterly!

Abstract: This essay examines the lives of two pianists with significant impairments of their right arms: Paul Wittgenstein, a classical pianist who lost his right arm in World War I, and Horace Parlan, a jazz pianist who lost full use of his right hand due to childhood polio. Drawing on theories of mêtis and passing developed by queer theory and disability studies scholars, we theorize aural passing to examine how Parlan and Wittgenstein differently navigated the rhetorical constraints of their respective musical genres. Engaging a rhetorical biography of each performer’s unique mêtis, we compare how disabled forms of passing are not equivalent across all instances and conclude by meditating on the entrenched ableism of musical pedagogy and performance.

Link to article: https://www.tandfonline.com/…/10…/02773945.2023.2232774

Free copies (while available):https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/PDEKA4GKGRIINQFC5GDH/full?target=10.1080/02773945.2023.2232774

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