"Sounding Bodies departs from the longstanding critical tradition of interpreting the erotics of music and musicianship in Victorian literature metaphorically. Instead, this book takes them literally, making a case for the sociopolitical importance of centralizing the embodied experiences of musical playing and listening in the world of contemporary classical music. I was impressed from start to finish by the author's mastery of Victorian literature, the history of acoustical science, and contemporary musicology, especially the insights of queer and feminist musicology." Dustin Friedman, author of Before Queer Theory: Victorian Aestheticism and the Self
"Eminently readable, Sounding Bodies shakes up the entrenched notion that the Victorians were stuffy and afraid of bodies. Reveling in the pleasures and reparative nature of music, while also reflecting on music's dark side, the book is for anyone interested in expansive explorations of eroticism." Duc Dau, author of Sex, Celibacy, and Deviance: The Victorians and the Song of Songs