Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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But what I cannot understand is how the Music of a male composer can communicate a "feminine" sensuality unless it involves preconceptions (I won't say "stereotypes") about what constitutes "femininity" (and, for that matter, "masculinity"); preconceptions that the Music itself contradicts - contradicts in that men can experience and express these features of "femininity" in their Music. If a male composer (Dallapiccola, Feldman, Sciarrino, Furrer, Bach) can write Music of such delicacy, tenderness and sensuality, then these are human characteristics, not specifically "feminine" ones (and if a woman - Lutyens, Neuwirth, Tansy Davis - can write Music expressing forcefulness, anger, dynamism, aggression; then it is a flawed idea of gender roles that describes such Music as "masculine"). This is why I find the two words "useless" - they don't work when faced with the sounds of the Music itself, and limit human characteristics to one or other sex, reinforcing gender stereotypes that I think are dangerous.
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