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(Jennifer A. Rea, Associate Professor of Classics and Graduate Coordinator, University of Florida, Gainesville)
«This thorough monograph is a welcome addition to the literature on ancient Greek and Roman music. With impressive erudition, Andreas Kramarz draws from a large corpus of ancient authors to investigate the notion of 'musical value' and explore the notoriously slippery concept of musical ethos. The originality of the book lies in putting modern aesthetic theory, music philosophy, and psychology in conversation with ancient musical writings, to discuss the fascinating topic of musical emotions in the context of ancient music.»
(Pauline LeVen, Associate Professor of Classics, Yale University)
«Andreas Kramarz has done a great service to several fields with this corpus of ancient ideas about 'good and bad music' - from Homer to the end of antiquity, including early Christian reception - that will stand as a fundamental resource for all further work on the subject. More than this, Kramarz offers a stimulating and original critical synthesis that draws on modern scholarship in aesthetics, philosophy, psychology, and cognitive science to demonstrate the continuing relevance of the ancient thinkers.»
(John C. Franklin, Associate Professor of Classics, University of Vermont, Burlington)