'This book reopens the subject of Jewish culture in the life and work of the twentieth-century classical composer Arnold Schoenberg … [it] draws on the writings of Austrian philosopher Otto Weininger, providing a welcome reintroduction of his work into musicological research. Above all, the author shows a remarkable ability to negotiate the shifting sands of Schoenberg's thought in an authoritative manner, not an easy task … this stimulating book should be available to all who are interested in European culture …' M. Dineen, Choice
'… Schoenberg and Redemption offers important evidence with highly believable postulations … this is an important book that deserves a wide readership …' Michael Haas, Times Literary Supplement
'Julie Brown's Schoenberg and Redemption newly testifies to the power of a composer's self-expressive prose … Bringing to light two previously [understudied] writings of Schoenberg, Julie Brown presents an absorbing view of his turn to atonality … Brown records a history of Schoenberg's modernist invention, and in the process, adds to Wagner's legacy too.' Victoria Aschheim, Notes: Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association