Rise of Rhythm Studies

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aesthetics
affect theory
art history
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Chinese literature
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European literature
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history of science
literary theory
meter
Middle Eastern literature
neuroscience
physics
poetry
reception studies
rhyme
rhythm
scale
sound studies

Product details

  • ISBN 9798765125281
  • Weight: 520g
  • Dimensions: 160 x 232mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Jan 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Rhythm is everywhere. Its ability to focus and unify interdisciplinary conversation begs the questions: What is rhythm and can different disciplines agree on its definition?

Rhythm studies have emerged as a key background form traversing cultural, natural, and social forms like cognition, communication, and even cosmology. An added boon: this background can seem unifying. Those who explore such entangled phenomena study the throbbing presence of rhythmic, oscillatory, and vibratory potentials: Neuroscientists turn to rhythm for novel explanations of why our cognitive capacities are so limited; physicists use it to cross time and space; scholars in various fields turn to it to rethink materialism and affect theory.

This lively collection considers why rhythm currently functions as a form of mediation between disciplines, across widely different scales and dimensions. The Rise of Rhythm Studies tests what rhythm can do through theoretical examinations and in case studies ranging from European literature to topology and media studies to Chinese visual art. Established scholars, such as Nina Kraus, Anna Gibbs, and Caroline Levine, alongside rising scholars in the field, marshal transdisciplinary perspectives in order to understand rhythm as a boundary condition for living in and working through and with the world.

Mark Lussier is Professor of English and Sustainability and Emeritus College Dean at Arizona State University, USA.

Richard C. Sha is Professor of Literature and Affiliate Professor of Philosophy at American University, USA.