Artigo Revisado por pares

Mother revolution: representations of the maternal body in the work of Tori Amos

2015; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 34; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s026114301500029x

ISSN

1474-0095

Autores

Sarah Boak,

Tópico(s)

Musicology and Musical Analysis

Resumo

Abstract The pregnant or maternal body is conspicuously absent within popular music. The dominant representation of female bodies – sonically, visually and spatially conceived – is that of a sexualised body, available to men and existing under the male gaze. The figure of the pregnant, maternal or motherly body is marked as Other – not desirable and therefore not marketable. Looking at the work of Tori Amos, I demonstrate how she makes the maternal body both audible and visible through a number of musical and extra-musical strategies. Theorising the maternal body in a series of overlapping stages – from the pregnant body to the maternal body, through liminal stages such as miscarriage and birthing – I highlight how Amos uses the figure of the maternal body not only to challenge dominant tropes of sexuality, but to create an embodied space where normative conceptions of ‘mother’ and ‘mothering’ can be troubled.

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