In what ways is music implicated in the politics of belonging? How is the proper at stake in listening? What role does the ear play in forming a sense of community? Music and Belonging argues that music at the level of style and form produces certain modes of listening that in turn reveal the conditions of belonging. Specifically listening shows the intimacy between two senses of belonging: belonging to a community is predicated on the possession of a particular property or capacity.<br>Somewhat counter-intuitively Waltham-Smith suggests that this relation between belonging-as-membership and belonging-as-ownership manifests itself with particular clarity and rigor at the very heart of the Austro-German canon in the instrumental music of Haydn Mozart and Beethoven. <em>Music and</em> <em>Belonging</em> provocatively brings recent European philosophy into contact with the renewed music-theoretical interest in <em>Formenlehre</em> presenting close analyses to show how we might return to this much-discussed repertoire to mine it for fresh insights.<br>The book's theoretical landscape offers a radical update to Adornian-inspired scholarship working through debates over relationality community and friendship between Derrida Nancy Agamben Badiou and Malabou. Borrowing the deconstructive strategies of closely reading canonical texts to the point of their unraveling the book teases out a new politics of listening from processes of repetition and liquidation from harmonic suppressions and even from trills. What emerges is the enduring political significance of listening to this music in an era of heightened social exclusion under neoliberalism.<br>