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Self-Actualization: Transcendentalist Discourse in the Work of Stuart Saunders Smith

Duarte Lacerda, Jose Augusto

Abstract Details

2015, Doctor of Musical Arts (DMA), Bowling Green State University, Contemporary Music.
Born and raised in Maine, composer Stuart Saunders Smith (1948) grew up immersed in a milieu that still echoed the influence of the nineteenth-century literary movement known as Transcendentalism. The work of key Transcendentalist figures, such as Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau, show the movement’s emphasis on autonomy, intuition, pacifism, and social justice. But Transcendentalism also maintains a spiritual focus: a claim that each person is part of a single universal spirit—“Oneness.” However, this “Oneness” does not equate to homogeneity of ideas and individual voices. Rather, each person’s divine worth grants them autonomy of thought and agency. Both the social and spiritual ideas of Transcendentalism have informed Smith’s music, his writings on music compositional process, and his personal life. Amongst the Transcendentalist notions displayed in Smith’s music, pacifism and anti-technologism appear in his use of intricate rhythms. A Thoreauvian anti-materialism can be found in Smith’s limited use of instrumentation and in his concept of “percussion ecology.” Moreover, the Transcendentalist non-teleological stance is reflected in Smith’s tendency to write evening-length pieces that disregard form, his recurring references to New England imagery, and his use of non-sequiturs. Finally, the idea of Oneness is demonstrated through Smith’s endeavor to level the roles of composer, performer, and audience, shown particularly in works that Smith categorizes as “trans-media systems,” “mobile compositions,” and “co-existence pieces.” Other important Transcendentalist notions recurrent in Smith’s work and compositional process include: intuition, experience, thought autonomy, isolation, self-reliance, and self-actualization. Smith’s focus on these ideas has rendered his overall discourse and much of his compositions antithetical to musical formalism, which implies focus on technique and systematic development. Instead, Smith understands that a composition should arise from a collaboration between intuition and experience. In other words, in Smith’s compositional process, experience “filtered” through intuition is always paramount to pre-compositional systems (such as serialism). This stance suggests that Smith’s music is part of a lineage of thought and aesthetic expression that traces back to the Transcendentalists: the idea of facing tradition critically and developing critical thought and free agency (understanding that intuition generates these stances) as the primary sources of artistic creation.
Roger Schupp (Advisor)
Marilyn Shrude (Committee Member)
Timothy Messer-Kruse (Committee Member)
Thomas Rosenkranz (Committee Member)
Robert Wallace (Other)
156 p.

Recommended Citations

Citations

  • Duarte Lacerda, J. A. (2015). Self-Actualization: Transcendentalist Discourse in the Work of Stuart Saunders Smith [Doctoral dissertation, Bowling Green State University]. OhioLINK Electronic Theses and Dissertations Center. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1447398824

    APA Style (7th edition)

  • Duarte Lacerda, Jose Augusto. Self-Actualization: Transcendentalist Discourse in the Work of Stuart Saunders Smith. 2015. Bowling Green State University, Doctoral dissertation. OhioLINK Electronic Theses and Dissertations Center, http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1447398824.

    MLA Style (8th edition)

  • Duarte Lacerda, Jose Augusto. "Self-Actualization: Transcendentalist Discourse in the Work of Stuart Saunders Smith." Doctoral dissertation, Bowling Green State University, 2015. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=bgsu1447398824

    Chicago Manual of Style (17th edition)