520 results on '"Music and literature"'
Search Results
2. La musique rédemptrice: K.622 et Dring de Christian Gailly.
- Author
-
BODZIŃSKA-BOBKOWSKA, JADWIGA
- Subjects
CHRISTIAN fiction ,PSYCHOANALYSTS ,SAXOPHONISTS ,MUSICALS ,AUTHORS - Abstract
The aim of this study is to compare two novels by Christian Gailly, a French jazz saxophonist, psychoanalyst and writer, died in 2013. The universes of the novels K.622 and Dring, are similar in terms of the action and the characteristics of their protagonists, both in their fifties, and depressed; music lovers and obsessed with concrete musical works. This study shows that the mainspring of the narrative, the center of the fictional universe and the major interest of the characters is music. Perceived as an ordering principle of the universe, Mozart's and Bach's music is not only omnipresent in the novels, but above all is a life-saving power. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Roots of Lorca’s Black Poetry in Van Vechten’s Vision of the African American Spiritual
- Author
-
Orringer, Nelson R.
- Subjects
music and literature ,African American spirituals ,Federico García Lorca ,Carl Van Vechten ,Poeta en Nueva York ,African American poetry - Abstract
Just as Lorca identified the Andalusian Gypsies (hereafter Roma) with deep song, so he equated New York African Americans with their spirituals, as defined in Carl Van Vechten’s 1925 article, “The Folksongs of the American Negro: The Importance of the Negro Spirituals in the Music of America.” Van Vechten notes that Black people felt ashamed of their spirituals for their slave origins, and Lorca surmised that African Americans were uneasy by nature. Yet Van Vechten regards spirituals as the most important contributions of America to music composition. Their sincerity makes them equal or superior to any folk music. Hence Lorca deems African Americans the most American minority of all, the most spiritual and delicate. From spirituals, writes Van Vechten, stem all popular American music. Therefore, Lorca finds Black people to be influential on all North American culture. Van Vechten contrasts what he calls “natural” Black music sung in its original dialect to artificial European operatic techniques for singing it. Accordingly, Lorca opposes African American naturalness in general to Caucasian artificiality. This antithesis permeates all of Lorca’s African American poems: “Norma y Paraíso de los negros,” “El rey de Harlem,” “Iglesia abandonada (Balada de la Gran Guerra),” and “Danza de la muerte.” After summarizing Van Vechten’s article, we use it to clarify that otherwise hermetic poetry.
- Published
- 2023
4. Contrappunto, distorsione e fuga Leónidas e Osvaldo Lamborghini
- Author
-
Lorenzo Mari
- Subjects
osvaldo lamborghini ,leónidas lamborghini ,neobarroco ,counterpoint ,fugue ,music and literature ,Philosophy (General) ,B1-5802 ,Sociology (General) ,HM401-1281 - Abstract
This article focuses on the relationship between Leónidas and Osvaldo Lamborghini’s works in the attempt to describe their brotherhood as an existential, literary and also “musical”, bond. Their works, in fact, appear to be based on some notions derived from musical composition and practice – counterpoint, distortion and fugue – which can be applied to the formal analysis of their texts, as well as to their relationship with the wider scenario of Argentinian and international culture in the second half of the 20th century and, finally, to their mutual and multilayered relationship as writers. Such a reading also implies a reconsideration of the label of “neobarroco literature”, as counterpoint and fugue – being mediated by the more modern concept and practice of distortion – directly recall the compositional methods of baroque music.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. D'Aulnoy's Histoire d'Hypolite: A Manifesto for the Subversive Power of Music.
- Author
-
Stedman, Allison
- Subjects
LITERARY form ,FAIRY tales ,HISTORICAL fiction ,CENSORSHIP ,POLITICAL systems ,REALITY television programs - Abstract
It is well known that Marie-Catherine d'Aulnoy's historical novel, Histoire d'Hypolite, comte de Duglas contains the first literary fairy tale in the French tradition and that the dynamic between novel and fairy tale in this work provided French readers with a model of production and reception for the publication of future tales. However, in creating a manifesto for the fairy tale as a new literary genre, Histoire d'Hypolite also provided a model for the ways in which the incorporation of music in fairy tales could advance the socio-political agendas of authors interested in subverting Louis XIV's absolutism while simultaneously avoiding censorship. This essay examines how the model that the novel's main character Hypolite advances for incorporating music into fairy tales was reprised in the fairy tales and frame novels that d'Aulnoy composed over the course of the decade that followed the publication of Histoire d'Hypolite. Although musical interventions in literary texts are more commonly known for distilling the particularities of fictional and dramatic works into aphorism and for transforming the diegetic universe of the text into the universal appeal of a social or emotional lesson, in Hypolite's model, the musical interventions do not refer back to the diegesis of the tale. Rather, they comment directly on the teller's reality, serving as a means of communication with the tale's intended audience and encouraging cooperation from that audience in a collective endeavor to resist patriarchal oppression and the political systems that sustain it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Witolorauda Józefa Ignacego Kraszewskiego w twórczości Stanisława Moniuszki.
- Author
-
Magdziak, Agata
- Abstract
Copyright of Perspectives on Culture / Perspektywy Kultury is the property of Jesuit University Ignatianum in Krakow and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Narrative and Robert Schumann’s Songs : A New Approach to the Romantic Lied
- Author
-
Weaver, Andrew H. and Weaver, Andrew H.
- Published
- 2024
8. Cultures of compassion in English, French, and Italian literature and music, 1300-1700
- Author
-
Barnes, Diana G
- Published
- 2022
9. Too Late to Be Late Again: David Bowie, the Late 1970s, and Romanticism
- Author
-
Knox, Julian, Lumsden, Paul, Series Editor, Katz Montiel, Marco, Series Editor, and Rovira, James, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Drug Use and Drug Literature from the Eighteenth Century to David Bowie
- Author
-
Pellerin, Eric, Lumsden, Paul, Series Editor, Katz Montiel, Marco, Series Editor, and Rovira, James, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. David Bowie and Romantic Androgyny
- Author
-
Rovira, James, Lumsden, Paul, Series Editor, Katz Montiel, Marco, Series Editor, and Rovira, James, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Relics of The Future: The Melancholic Romanticism of Bowie’s Berlin Triptych
- Author
-
Rowe, Paul Steven, Lumsden, Paul, Series Editor, Katz Montiel, Marco, Series Editor, and Rovira, James, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. 'Rebel Rebel': Bowie as Romantic 'Type'
- Author
-
Gladden, Samuel Lyndon, Lumsden, Paul, Series Editor, Katz Montiel, Marco, Series Editor, and Rovira, James, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The Goblin King, Absurdity, and Nonbinary Thinking
- Author
-
Venters, Aglaia Maretta, Lumsden, Paul, Series Editor, Katz Montiel, Marco, Series Editor, and Rovira, James, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Introduction: David Bowie and Romanticism
- Author
-
Rovira, James, Lumsden, Paul, Series Editor, Katz Montiel, Marco, Series Editor, and Rovira, James, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Capitalist Co-optation, Romantic Resistance, and Bowie’s Allegorical Performance in Nicolas Roeg’s The Man Who Fell to Earth
- Author
-
Levine, William, Lumsden, Paul, Series Editor, Katz Montiel, Marco, Series Editor, and Rovira, James, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Negative Capability in Space: The Romantic Bowieverse
- Author
-
Guenther, Shawna, Lumsden, Paul, Series Editor, Katz Montiel, Marco, Series Editor, and Rovira, James, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. 'Blackstar': David Bowie’s Twenty-First-Century Ars Moriendi
- Author
-
Lodine-Chaffey, Jennifer Lillian, Lumsden, Paul, Series Editor, Katz Montiel, Marco, Series Editor, and Rovira, James, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. 1. Outside as Bowie’s Gothic Technodrama: Fascism and the Irrational Near the Turn of the Millennia
- Author
-
Rovira, James, Lumsden, Paul, Series Editor, Katz Montiel, Marco, Series Editor, and Rovira, James, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Routledge Handbook of Progressive Rock, Metal, and the Literary Imagination
- Author
-
Chris Anderton, Lori Burns, Chris Anderton, and Lori Burns
- Subjects
- Progressive rock music--History and criticism, Heavy metal (Music)--History and criticism, Music and literature
- Abstract
This Handbook illustrates the many ways that progressive rock and metal music forge striking engagements with literary texts and themes.The authors and their objects of analytic inquiry offer global and diverse perspectives on these genres and their literary connections: from ancient times to the modern world, from children's literature to epic poetry, from mythology to science fiction, and from esoteric fantasy to harsh political criticism. The musical treatments of these literary materials span the continents from South and North America through Europe and Asia. The collection presents critical perspectives on the enduring and complex relationships between words and music as these are expressed in progressive rock and metal.The book is aimed primarily at an academic market, valuable for second- through final-year students on undergraduate courses devoted to both popular music and to literary studies, and to postgraduate programs and researchers in a range of fields, including popular music studies, musicology, creative music performance and composition, songwriting, literary studies, narrative studies, folklore studies, science fiction studies, cultural studies, liberal studies, and sociology, and for media and history courses that have an interest in the intersection of narratives, music, and society.
- Published
- 2025
21. Love as a peace process?: Arab-Jewish love in the Anglophone Palestinian novels of Naomi Shihab Nye and Samir El-Youssef
- Author
-
Irving, Sarah
- Published
- 2017
22. Music's Making : The Poetry of Music, the Music of Poetry
- Author
-
Michael Cherlin and Michael Cherlin
- Subjects
- Music theory--Philosophy, Music--Religious aspects--Judaism, Music and philosophy, Music and literature
- Abstract
As a work of musical theory, or meta-theory, Music's Making draws extensively on work done in philosophy and literary criticism in addition to the scholarship of musicologists and music theorists. Music's Making is divided into two large parts. The first half develops global attitudes toward music: emergence out of self and hearing through (drawing on Kabbalah and other sources), middle-voice (as discussed in philosophical phenomenology), liminal space (as discussed in literary theory), an ethics of intersubjectivity (drawing on Levinas), and character, canon, and metaleptic transformations (drawing chiefly on Harold Bloom). The second half embodies a search for metaphors, figurative language toward understanding music's endlessly variegated shaping of time-space. The musicians and scholars who inform this part of the book include Pierre Boulez, Gilles Deleuze, Anton Webern, Morton Feldman, and James Dillon. The book closes with an extended inquiry into the metaphors of horizontal and vertical experience and the spiritual qualities of musical experience expressed through those metaphors.
- Published
- 2024
23. Taylor Swift by the Book : The Literature Behind the Lyrics, From Fairy Tales to Tortured Poets
- Author
-
Rachel Feder, Tiffany Tatreau, Rachel Feder, and Tiffany Tatreau
- Subjects
- Popular music--Literary themes, motives, Country music--Literary themes, motives, Music and literature
- Abstract
From a Robert Frost poem on her debut album to the myth of Cassandra on The Tortured Poets Department, Taylor Swift's lyrics are filled with literary connections.Make sure you're catching them all with this expert guide to the novels, poems, and plays that influence her songwriting.Let a literature professor and a musical theater artist guide you through the Taylor Swift canon—from Shakespeare to the Brontë sisters to Daphne du Maurier! Learn what'New Romantics'has to do with the old RomanticsGet to know the Gothic monsters haunting MidnightsSpot Taylor's many Great Gatsby referencesDiscover what Taylor Swift and Emily Dickinson have in commonAnd find your new favorite tortured poet!Packed with fun facts, entertaining analysis, and literary-themed playlists that fans will love, Taylor Swift by the Book will turn anyone from a Taylor Swift lover into a Taylor Swift scholar.With full-color illustrations highlighting the literary eras of Dr. Swift (yes, she has an honorary PhD), it's a perfect gift for the Swiftie in your life.
- Published
- 2024
24. 'Lyrik aus erster Hand' : Mahler und Rückertz
- Author
-
Hans-Joachim Hinrichsen, Erich W. Partsch, Ivana Rentsch, Hans-Joachim Hinrichsen, Erich W. Partsch, and Ivana Rentsch
- Subjects
- Music and literature
- Abstract
Vorwort – C. Wiener: Vom Dichter, der nicht vertont sein wollte. Rückerts poetisches Selbstverständnis und Tendenzen der Rezeption seines Werks – H.-J. Hinrichsen: Das nicht vollendete Schöne. Mahler und Rückert – C. Maurer Zenck: Die Dramaturgie der Rückert-Lieder – I. Rentsch: Gefangene Klanggeister. Mahlers Kindertotenlieder - eine musikalische Übersetzung von Rückerts Lyrik – E. W. Partsch: „Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen“. Zu Mahlers sublimer Inszenierung eines Rückzugs – F. Geiger: Lyrik und Orchester in Mahlers Liedern nach Rückert – A. Stollberg: Das Lied in der Symphonie - oder: Mahlers „neuer Weg“ mit Rückert – C. Hilz: Über das Verhältnis von Text und Klang. Einige Gedanken zur Interpretation von Mahlers Rückert-Liedern aus der Sicht des Sängers und Gesangspädagogen – H. Hein: Diskographie: Mahlers Rückert-Lieder auf Tonträgern
- Published
- 2024
25. Flannery at the Grammys
- Author
-
Irwin H. Streight and Irwin H. Streight
- Subjects
- Music and literature, Popular music--History and criticism, Popular music--Philosophy and aesthetics
- Abstract
A devout Catholic, a visionary—and some say prophetic—writer, Flannery O'Connor (1925–1964) has gained a growing presence in contemporary popular culture. While O'Connor professed that she did not have an ear for music, allusions to her writing appear in the lyrics and narrative form of some of the most celebrated musicians on the contemporary music scene. Flannery at the Grammys sounds the extensive influence of this southern author on the art and vision of a suite of American and British singer-songwriters and pop groups. Author Irwin H. Streight invites critical awareness of O'Connor's resonance in the products of popular music culture—in folk, blues, rock, gospel, punk, heavy metal, and indie pop songs by some of the most notable figures in the popular music business. Streight examines O'Connor's influence on the art and vision of multiple Grammy Award winners Bruce Springsteen, Lucinda Williams, R.E.M., and U2, along with celebrated songwriters Nick Cave, PJ Harvey, Sufjan Stevens, Mary Gauthier, Tom Waits, and others. Despite her orthodox religious, and at times controversial, views and limited literary output, O'Connor has left a curiously indelible mark on the careers of the successful musicians discussed in this volume. Still, her acknowledged influence and remarkable presence in contemporary pop and rock songs has not been well noted by pop music critics and/or literary scholars. Many years in the making, Flannery at the Grammys achieves groundbreaking work in cultural studies and combines in-depth literary and pop music scholarship to engage the informed devotee and the casual reader alike.
- Published
- 2024
26. Intermedial Encounters Between Image, Music and Text : With and Beyond Roland Barthes
- Author
-
Fabien Arribert-Narce, Alex Watson, Fabien Arribert-Narce, and Alex Watson
- Subjects
- Art and literature, Music and literature
- Abstract
«This volume locates itself neatly in the growing collection of publications on intermediality by relating such practices to Roland Barthes. Barthesian motifs and writerly concerns are found within a variety of intermedial practices, as the analysis moves, historically and globally, across visual, aural and literary cultures. Such an approach is both appropriate and innovative within Barthes Studies and in cultural theory more generally.» (Andy Stafford, Professor of French and Critical Theory, University of Leeds) The essays in this collection reconsider Roland Barthes as a crucial figure in intermedia studies, arguing that the concepts and forms of analysis he pioneered are of continuing importance for students and scholars working in the field. These essays utilize an interdisciplinary methodology, drawing on Barthes's own intermedial critical practice, to examine the multiple relationships between art, literature, music and performance and across different languages. The collection places Barthes's writing in critical dialogue with other theorists, including Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, Dick Higgins and Emmanuel Levinas, investigating the work of figures as varied as André Breton, Giordano Bruno, Alain Cavalier, Alfred Hitchcock, Marcel Schwob, W. G. Sebald, Steven Spielberg, Yoko Tawada and Lev Tolstoy. The collection demonstrates that Barthes's intermedial critical and theoretical practice provides a means of challenging fixed critical narratives and exploring crucial intermedial issues, including how narrative crosses media, the close relationship between image and text throughout history, and how twentieth-century consumer capitalist culture transformed the relationship between image and text.
- Published
- 2024
27. The Gothic Imagination in the Music of Franz Schubert
- Author
-
Joe Davies and Joe Davies
- Subjects
- Gothic revival (Literature)--History and criticism, Art, Gothic--Influence, Music and literature
- Abstract
Offers a major new contribution to understanding Schubert's creative approach and the gothic imagination more generally.This book illuminates Franz Schubert's engagement with gothic discourse at the intersection of music, literature and the visual arts. Ideas of the gothic provide a framework for contextualizing the myriad ways in which Schubert's music evokes the blurring of past and present, life and death, and for situating strangeness in relation to a cross-disciplinary phenomenon that captivated the imagination of the time.The study traces the gothic from Schubert's early songs, where its presence is well established, to the instrumental music of his final years. These dialogues speak to shifting associations across chronological boundaries; their traces undergo change, returning in altered contexts - from fleeting disturbances, a rhythmic shudder or a tremolo figuration, to prolonged outbursts and disjuncture. The gothic is at times linked explicitly to death, as in Schubert's graveyard settings, and at other times implied through doubles and distortion, nocturnal imagery, or hybridity and metamorphosis.The Gothic Imagination in the Music of Franz Schubert offers new interpretations, grounded in close reading of musical and poetic material, that move beyond the ghostly and macabre towards a world wherein death, the sublime and grotesquerie are intricately entwined. The book therefore provides for a major new contribution to understanding Schubert's creative approach and the gothic imagination more generally.
- Published
- 2024
28. The Literary Taylor Swift : Songwriting and Intertextuality
- Author
-
Betsy Winakur Tontiplaphol, Anastasia Klimchynskaya, Betsy Winakur Tontiplaphol, and Anastasia Klimchynskaya
- Subjects
- Music and literature, Popular music--United States--History and criticism
- Abstract
Taylor Swift, arguably the most prolific and acclaimed singer-songwriter of the 21st century, has shaped her listeners'collective consciousness and challenged her industry's often limiting attitudes toward genre, revision, and collaboration. Although Swift is a perennial subject in the media, cast in both a positive and a negative light, few professional scholars have considered her ever-growing body of work. The Literary Taylor Swift examines Swift's significance and timeliness through literary analysis and theory. Taylor Swift has been celebrated for her ability to craft immersive narratives and to articulate, with lyrical acuity, a broad range of emotional experiences, and her lyrics underscore her profound relationship with text. The Literary Taylor Swift explores Swift's engagements, intertextual and otherwise, with literature and treats her songs as literature-as, that is, stories, poems, and other textual forms to which literary-critical theories and methodologies can and should be productively applied. This collection offers carefully curated arguments constellated around four key relationships: Swift and the literary-historical canon; Swift and the language of gender and sexuality; Swift and the relationship between writing and memory; and Swift and the nature of literary craft.
- Published
- 2024
29. Jazz and Literature : An Introduction
- Author
-
Maria Antónia Lima, Mia Funk, Maria Antónia Lima, and Mia Funk
- Subjects
- Essays, Literary criticism, Music and literature, Jazz--History and criticism
- Abstract
Jazz and Literature: An Introduction presents an original collection of essays from leading international scholars, examining an array of musical and literary interconnections including improvisation, multicultural influences, poetry, modernism, the Beat movement, jazz forms, noir, solo and collective expression, global perspectives on jazz and literature, etc. This volume sheds light on the critical and creative discussions of music and literature, showing the evolving relevance of jazz in the twenty-first century. The book also includes a special section dedicated to interviews with writers, musicians, and creatives such as U.S. Poet Laureate Ada Limón, Jericho Brown, Anthony Joseph, Geoff Dyer, Paul Hirsch, Dickie Landry, and Dwandalyn R. Reece. This volume is an ideal resource for students of music and literature and for academics interested in the creative dialogues between jazz and literature.
- Published
- 2024
30. Narrative and Robert Schumann’s Songs : A New Approach to the Romantic Lied
- Author
-
Andrew H. Weaver and Andrew H. Weaver
- Subjects
- Songs, German--19th century--Analysis, appreciation, Songs, German--19th century--History and criticism, Narrative in music, Music and literature, Narration (Rhetoric)
- Abstract
Featuring 28 music examples this book takes an innovative approach to analyzing and interpreting nineteenth-century German song, offering new perspectives on Robert Schumann's Lieder and song cycles.Robert Schumann's Lieder are some of the richest and most complex songs in the repertoire and have long raised questions and stimulated discussion among scholars, performers, and listeners. While a wide range of methodologies has been used to understand and interpret his songs, one that has been conspicuously absent is an approach based on narratology (the theory and study of narrative texts).Proceeding from the premise that the performance of a Lied is a narrative act, in which the singer and pianist together function as a narrator, Andrew Weaver's groundbreaking study proposes a comprehensive theory of narratology for the German Romantic Lied and song cycle, using Schumann's complete song oeuvre as the test case. The theory, grounded in the work of narratologist Mieke Bal but also drawing upon recent work in literary theory and musicology, illuminates how music can open up new meanings for the poem, as well as how a narratological analysis of the poem can help us understand the music.Weaver's book offers new insights into Schumann's Lieder and the poetry he set while simultaneously proposing a methodology applicable to the analysis and interpretation of a wide range of works, including not only the rich treasury of German Lieder but also potentially any genre of accompanied song in any language from the Middle Ages to the present day.
- Published
- 2024
31. Hemingway, Fitzgerald and the Muse of Romantic Music
- Author
-
Nicole J. Camastra and Nicole J. Camastra
- Subjects
- Music and literature, Music in literature, Music, Influence of, Romanticism--Influence
- Abstract
Both Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald grew up in the Midwest and were strongly influenced by Romantic music, anchored by the aesthetic tastes of the German immigrants who settled across that region. Hemingway's ear for form and Fitzgerald's penchant for lyricism stem from early and frequent exposure to such masters as Johannes Brahms and Franz Schubert. Nostalgia is typically associated with romanticism, and the acoustic longing found in Hemingway and Fitzgerald's fiction resonates with it, characterized in the narrative voices in Hemingway's Winner Take Nothing, Fitzgerald's Tender Is the Night, and other of their fiction from the early thirties. Understanding that each writer has his own kind of musical biography charts new ways to read material we already think we know. Reading their work within a musico-historical context means acknowledging it as an extension of the 19th century; it means reading them as Romantic Modernists. This work reads each author's prose musically, considering how Romantic music inspired their craft and distinguished their work through the pivotal juncture of the early to mid-1930s, when each man faced an artistic crisis of conscience. Initial chapters provide background information in music history. Following chapters focus on how the life of each author was shaped by music and how they worked with specific influences that grew out of steady interactions with it, evidence of which is found in archival documents and collections.
- Published
- 2024
32. 'Life as literature': Wright Morris's Love Among the Cannibals.
- Author
-
Kochin, Michael S.
- Subjects
- *
PROPHETS , *IMAGINATION , *VITALISM , *LITERATURE - Abstract
To become oneself, one must gain ownership of one's language and authorship of the stories one tells. The partisans of vitalism, and the prophets of a new American literature, both claim that the way to own one's language is to seek out new experiences that have not yet been put into language and put them into a language of one's own. Morris's alternative, set out in his critical writings but most fully exemplified in his 1957 novel Love Among the Cannibals, is to appropriate what has already been written as literature in order to overcome the domination of cliché, what 'everyone' or 'every American' says and therefore thinks and does, over one's language, imagination, and experiences. Wright Morris is urgent for us if we are to escape faddish memes and cannibalise our memories and our reading to nourish our own imaginations, without which we cannot read or write ourselves into a better or more just future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. 'A balm for the incurable wound of the world' : music and the pictorial mode in the writing of E.M. Forster
- Author
-
Henriques, Piers Antony and Hennegan, Alison
- Subjects
823 ,Music and Literature ,E.M. Forster ,Cambridge Apostles ,Modernism and music ,Modernism ,Intermediality ,Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson ,Aestheticism ,Edwardian fiction ,Pater and music ,Proust and the English novel ,Beethoven and Forster ,Wagner and Forster ,Forster and Egypt ,Music and queer studies - Abstract
Benjamin Britten opined in 1969 about twentieth century English literature that there ‘is no doubt that E. M. Forster is our most musical novelist’. Although Britten argues that Forster shows ‘a most sensitive reaction to music’, he notes (and disapproves of) Forster’s ‘curious tendency to mock at any intellectual approach on behalf of the listener’. Forster favours a critical discourse that guards against a sterilising effect of technical musicological language, and his essays on musical aesthetics articulate a stark epistemological divide between the ‘creative’ and the ‘critical’ modes of responding through the medium of words to the vagaries of musical sound; he is ‘more interested by the workings of the unconscious’ of the composer and listener than in the subsidiary technical exposition of the critic. Forster acknowledged that he was ‘no musician’ and outwardly states his general ambivalence towards technical criticism. Historically, however, musico-literary critics have attempted to explain Forster’s writing about music by methodologically borrowing from that same technical approach from which Forster was keen to distance himself. Such approaches have distracted scholars interested in music and the word from Forster’s own questions about music and ontology: What constitutes meaning in music? How can that meaning range so widely between different people? Can such differences be reconciled through intersubjective connection? To justify a claim for Forster as the twentieth century’s ‘most musical novelist’ requires calibration around a literary set of questions: How can one describe the sublime effect music has on the listener? Are there ways of drawing that sensation of unity into personal relationships in daily life? And does the value felt in music reflect on one’s own sense of nationhood? Taking Forster at his word as an amateur player, and lover, of music, this thesis focuses on how Forster figured music to convey more ‘more than the words of daily life can tell us’ about creativity, love, and cosmos.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Fiction for older readers [Book Review]
- Published
- 2016
35. Ton.Dichtung : Literatur und Musik von der Antike bis Doktor Faustus
- Author
-
Ulrich Gaier and Ulrich Gaier
- Subjects
- Antiquities in literature, Music and literature
- Abstract
Die Chöre der antiken Tragödie, die Sequenzen im christlichen Mittelalter, die Lieder der Troubadours und die Englischen Balladen – Text und Musik spielen zusammen, heißt doch carmen Lied und Zauberspruch. Mit vielen Textbeispielen in Original und Übersetzung folgt die Darstellung der wechselvollen Dominanz von Ton und Wort bis zu Thomas Manns Doktor Faustus und Hofmannsthals/Strauss'bzw. Brechts/Weills Zusammenarbeit.
- Published
- 2023
36. Poetry in English and Metal Music : Adaptation and Appropriation Across Media
- Author
-
Arturo Mora-Rioja and Arturo Mora-Rioja
- Subjects
- Heavy metal (Music)--History and criticism, Music and literature
- Abstract
Many metal songs incorporate poetry into their lyrics using a broad array of techniques, both textual and musical. This book develops a novel adaptation, appropriation, and quotation taxonomy that both expands our knowledge of how poetry is used in metal music and is useful for scholars across adaptation studies broadly. The text follows both a quantitative and a qualitative approach. It identifies 384 metal songs by 224 bands with intertextual ties to 146 poems written by fifty-one different poets, with a special focus on Edgar Allan Poe, John Milton's Paradise Lost and the work of WWI's War Poets. This analysis of transformational mechanisms allows poetry to find an afterlife in the form of metal songs and sheds light on both the adaptation and appropriation process and on the semantic shifts occasioned by the recontextualisation of the poems into the metal music culture. Some musicians reuse – and sometimes amplify – old verses related to politics and religion inour present times; others engage in criticism or simple contradiction. In some cases, the bands turn the abstract feelings evoked by the poems into concrete personal experiences. The most adventurous recraft the original verses by changing the point of view of either the poetic voice or the addressed actors, altering the vocaliser of the narrative or the gender of the protagonists. These mechanisms help metal musicians make the poems their own and adjust them to their artistic needs so that the resulting product is consistent with the expectations of the metal music culture.
- Published
- 2023
37. Lit-Rock : Literary Capital in Popular Music
- Author
-
Ryan Hibbett and Ryan Hibbett
- Subjects
- Popular music--History and criticism, Music and language, Music and literature, Popular music--Philosophy and aesthetics, Songs--Texts
- Abstract
Just as soon as it had got rolling, rock music had a problem: it wanted to be art. A mere four years separate the Beatles as mere kiddy culture from the artful geniuses of Sergeant Pepper's, meaning the very same band who represents the mass-consumed,'mindless'music of adolescents simultaneously enjoys status as among the best that Western culture has to offer. The story of rock music, it turns out, is less that of a contagious popular form situated in opposition to high art, but, rather, a story of high and low in dialogue--messy and contentious, to be sure, but also mutually obligated to account for, if not appropriate, one another. The chapters in this book track the uses of literature, specifically, within this relation, helping to showcase collectively its fundamental role in the emergence of the'pop omnivore.'
- Published
- 2023
38. Kapitoly z filosofie nové hudby
- Author
-
Fulka, Josef and Fulka, Josef
- Subjects
- Music and literature, Motion picture music, Musicology, Music--Philosophy and aesthetics, Atonality
- Abstract
Monografie Kapitoly z filosofie nové hudby se věnuje některým podobám interakce mezi hudbou, filosofií, literaturou a filmem v průběhu 20. století. Zaměřuje se především na způsob, jakým byla v literatuře a filosofii reflektována tzv. schönbergovská reforma vedoucí ke zrušení tonálního systému. Druhou podstatnou proměnou, jíž hudební jazyk v průběhu minulého století prošel a jež se stala předmětem pozoruhodných teoretických reflexí, je rovněž rušení rozdílu mezi (hudebním) zvukem a (přírodním) hlukem, jak k němu docházelo např. v konkrétní hudbě. Mezi autory, kteří se stávají předmětem zájmu Fulkovy knihy, patří Claude Lévi-Strauss, Theodor W. Adorno, Michel Foucault, Marcel Proust, Thomas Mann či Alain Robbe-Grillet. Přestože neusiluje o vyčerpávající přehled různých podob, jakých zmiňovaná interakce nabývá, v reprezentativní podobě ukazuje rozmanitost a bohatost různých způsobů teoretického uvažování o problematice „nové hudby“.
- Published
- 2023
39. 'Make It Old': Retro Forms and Styles in Literature and Music
- Author
-
Walter Bernhart, Werner Wolf, Walter Bernhart, and Werner Wolf
- Subjects
- Retro (Style) in popular music, Music and literature, Retro (Style) in music, Retro (Style) in literature
- Abstract
‘Retro'is not only a pervading phenomenon in today's Western culture but has informed cultural history for some centuries and thus gives momentousness to the subject of the present volume, namely literary texts and musical compositions which, for various reasons and with multiple functions, ‘make it old'.
- Published
- 2022
40. The Marriage between Literature and Music
- Author
-
Nick Ceramella, Editor and Nick Ceramella, Editor
- Subjects
- Music and literature
- Abstract
Music and literature have often been interconnected through the centuries. This is an intellectual and spiritual marriage between two artistic worlds, which are both part of a creative system that lends voice to one another. As this book argues, while music is one single form of expression, literature can be expressed in the form of either poetry or prose. However, they find their apotheosis, their most natural relationship, when poetry is set to music, especially when it is lyrical and has similar phrasing and rhythms to music. The book, thus, shows that music offers an additional perspective to literature, while the latter gives words to the feelings that the former arouses. As such, though both can stand alone, if put together, they form a complementary entity that everybody can enjoy.
- Published
- 2022
41. The Drum Is a Wild Woman : Jazz and Gender in African Diaspora Literature
- Author
-
Patricia G. Lespinasse and Patricia G. Lespinasse
- Subjects
- Women in music, Jazz--History and criticism, Jazz in literature, African American women authors, Wild women in literature, Music and literature
- Abstract
In 1957, Duke Ellington released the influential album A Drum Is a Woman. This musical allegory revealed the implicit truth about the role of women in jazz discourse—jilted by the musician and replaced by the drum. Further, the album's cover displays an image of a woman sitting atop a drum, depicting the way in which the drum literally obscures the female body, turning the subject into an object. This objectification of women leads to a critical reading of the role of women in jazz music: If the drum can take the place of a woman, then a woman can also take the place of a drum. The Drum Is a Wild Woman: Jazz and Gender in African Diaspora Literature challenges that image but also defines a counter-tradition within women's writing that involves the reinvention and reclamation of a modern jazz discourse. Despite their alienation from bebop, women have found jazz music empowering and have demonstrated this power in various ways. The Drum Is a Wild Woman explores the complex relationship between women and jazz music in recent African diasporic literature. The book examines how women writers from the African diaspora have challenged and revised major tropes and concerns of jazz literature since the bebop era in the mid-1940s. Black women writers create dissonant sounds that broaden our understanding of jazz literature. By underscoring the extent to which gender is already embedded in jazz discourse, author Patricia G. Lespinasse responds to and corrects narratives that tell the story of jazz through a male-centered lens. She concentrates on how the Wild Woman, the female vocalist in classic blues, used blues and jazz to push the boundaries of Black womanhood outside of the confines of respectability. In texts that refer to jazz in form or content, the Wild Woman constitutes a figure of resistance who uses language, image, and improvisation to refashion herself from object to subject. This book breaks new ground by comparing the politics of resistance alongside moments of improvisation by examining recurring literary motifs—cry-and-response, the Wild Woman, and the jazz moment—in jazz novels, short stories, and poetry, comparing works by Ann Petry, Gayl Jones, Toni Morrison, Paule Marshall, Edwidge Danticat, and Maya Angelou with pieces by Albert Murray, Ralph Ellison, James Baldwin, and Ellington. Within an interdisciplinary and transnational context, Lespinasse foregrounds the vexed negotiations around gender and jazz discourse.
- Published
- 2022
42. Angela Carter and Folk Music : 'Invisible Music', Prose and the Art of Canorography
- Author
-
Polly Paulusma and Polly Paulusma
- Subjects
- Folk songs in literature, Music and literature
- Abstract
From her unique standpoint as singer-songwriter-scholar, Polly Paulusma examines the influences of Carter's 1960s folk singing, unknown until now, on her prose writing. Recent critical attention has focused on Carter's relationship with folk/fairy tales, but this book uses a newly available archive containing Carter's folk song notes, books, LPs and recordings to change the debate, proving Carter performed folk songs. Placing this archive alongside the album sleeve notes Carter wrote and her diaries and essays, it reimagines Carter's prose as a vehicle for the singing voice, and reveals a writing style imbued with'songfulness'informed by her singing praxis.Reading Carter's texts through songs she knew and sang, this book shows, from influences of rhythm, melodic shape, thematic focus, imagery,'voice'and'breath', how Carter steeped her writing with folk song's features to produce'canorography': song-infused prose. Concluding with a discussion of Carter's profound influence on songwriters, focusing on the author's interview with Emily Portman, this book invites us to reimagine Carter's prose as audial event, dissolving boundaries between prose and song, between text and reader, between word and sound, in an ever-renewing act of sympathetic resonance.
- Published
- 2022
43. The Poetic Music of Wallace Stevens
- Author
-
Bart Eeckhout, Lisa Goldfarb, Bart Eeckhout, and Lisa Goldfarb
- Subjects
- Music and literature
- Abstract
Wallace Stevens's musicality is so profound that scholars have only begun to grasp his ties to the art of music or the music of his own poetry. In this study, two long-time specialists present a polyphonic composition in which they pursue various interlocking perspectives. Their case studies demonstrate how music as a temporal art form may affect a poetic of ephemerality, sensuous experience, and affective intensification. Such a poetic, they argue, invites flexible interpretations that respond to poetry as an art of textual performance. How did Stevens enact the relation between music and memory? How can we hear his verse as a form of melody-making? What was specific to his ways of recording birdsong? Have we been missing the latent music of Richard Strauss, Gustav Mahler, and Claude Debussy in particular poems? What were the musical poetics he shared with Igor Stravinsky? And how is our experience of the late poetry transformed when we listen to a musical setting by Ned Rorem? The Poetic Music of Wallace Stevens will appeal to experts in the poet's work, students of Modernism in the arts, and a wider audience fascinated by the dynamics of exchange between music and poetry.
- Published
- 2022
44. Reading Franz Liszt : Revealing the Poetry Behind the Piano Music
- Author
-
Paul Roberts and Paul Roberts
- Subjects
- Piano music--19th century--History and criticism, Music and literature
- Abstract
A look beyond the virtuosity of Romanticism's piano superstar.Pianist Paul Roberts recasts Franz Liszt as a composer of poetic feeling rather than just a purveyor of technical brilliance. Reading Franz Liszt: Revealing the Poetry behind the Piano Music immerses readers in Liszt's world through a vivid exploration of his most beloved pieces and the literature that inspired them—from Petrarch's love poetry to the sensibilities of Byron, Sénancour, Goethe, and others. The origins of artistic inspiration can be obscure. However, for Franz Liszt, literary quotations in his scores provide fascinating insights into the sources of his creative imagination, revealing a breadth of reading that inspired some of the greatest piano music of all time.A knowledge of the writers whom Liszt revered and often quoted at length enriches an understanding and appreciation of his music. Roberts shows how Liszt in his pioneering piano works created a new concept of musical expression comparable to the emotional and dramatic power of the opera and novel. This book leads us into the essence of Liszt's poetic world, revealing the relevance of his literary inspiration for today's listeners as well as for performers coming to terms with its expressive demands.
- Published
- 2022
45. Cather and Opera
- Author
-
David McKay Powell and David McKay Powell
- Subjects
- Opera in literature, Music and literature
- Abstract
Throughout her fiction, Willa Cather mentioned forty-seven operas. References to opera appear in all but three of her twelve novels and in roughly half of her short stories. Despite a dearth of musical education, Cather produced astute writing about the genre beginning in her earliest criticism and continuing throughout her career. She counted opera stars among her close friends, and according to Edith Lewis, her companion throughout adulthood, the two women frequently visited the theater, even in the early days, when purchasing tickets to attend performances proved a financial sacrifice. Melding cultural history with thoughtful readings of her works and discussions of opera's complex place in turn-of-the-century America, David McKay Powell's Cather and Opera offers the first book-length study of what drew the writer so powerfully and repeatedly to the art form. With close attention to Cather's fiction and criticism, Powell posits that at the heart of both her work and the operatic corpus dwells an innate tension between high artistic ideals and popular acceptance, often figured as a clash between compositional integrity and raw, personal emotion. Considering her connection to opera in both historical and intertextual terms, Cather and Opera investigates what operatic references mean in Cather's writing, along with what the opera represented to her throughout her life.
- Published
- 2022
46. The Music of the Spheres in the Western Imagination
- Author
-
David J. Kendall and David J. Kendall
- Subjects
- Science fiction--History and criticism, Fantasy fiction--History and criticism, Music and literature, Music in literature, Church music, Music--Philosophy and aesthetics, Harmony of the spheres
- Abstract
The Music of the Spheres in the Western Imagination describes various systematic musical ecologies of the cosmos by examining attempts over time to define Western theoretical musical systems, whether practical, human, nonhuman, or celestial. This book focuses on the theoretical, theological, philosophical, physical, and mathematical concepts of a cosmic musical order and how these concepts have changed in order to fit different worldviews through the imaginations of theologians, theorists, and authors of fiction, as well as the practical performance of music. Special attention is given to music theory treatises between the ninth and sixteenth centuries, English-language hymnody from the eighteenth century to the present, polemical works on music and worship from the last hundred years, the Divine Comedy of Dante, nineteenth- and twentieth-century English-language fiction, the fictional works of C. S. Lewis, and the legendarium of J. R. R. Tolkien.
- Published
- 2022
47. Die vertonte Rede. Prinzipien der Liedkomposition Franz Schuberts
- Author
-
Hoyer and Hoyer
- Subjects
- Songs (Schubert, Franz), Songs, German--Analysis, appreciation.--19th c, Music and literature, Songs--Analysis, appreciation, Songs, German--Analysis, appreciation
- Abstract
Vertont ein Komponist ein literarisches Werk, dann kann er seine Komposition auf verschiedene Ebenen des Textes hin ausrichten – auf dessen formalpoetischen Bau, die Atmosphäre, den Inhalt, die Metaphorik und andere. Franz Schubert hat sich bei seinen Liedkompositionen vor allem auf den Sprechvorgang konzentriert. Für ihn stand im Mittelpunkt, dass die Musik das gedruckte poetische Wort wieder hörbar werden lässt. Wie das geschieht und welche Wirkungen sich daraus auf Inhalt und Aussage der Dichtung ergeben, zeigt Michael Hoyer an zwölf teils bekannten, teils wenig bekannten Liedern aus Schuberts mittlerer und später Schaffensperiode. Nach eingehender Analyse der dichterischen Vorlage untersucht er jeweils, wie die Komposition die poetischen Vorgaben aufgreift, modifiziert, erweitert oder auch konterkariert. Präzise musikanalytische Angaben zu Singstimme und Begleitung belegen Hoyers Ausführungen und machen sie nachvollziehbar. Die vollständigen Notentexte aller besprochenen Kompositionen sind im Anhang des Buches abgedruckt.
- Published
- 2022
48. Popular Music Autobiography : The Revolution in Life-Writing by 1960s' Musicians and Their Descendants
- Author
-
Oliver Lovesey and Oliver Lovesey
- Subjects
- Autobiography, Popular music--History and criticism, Nineteen sixties, Musicians--Biography--History and criticism, Music and literature, Biography as a literary form, Biography
- Abstract
The 1960s saw the nexus of the revolution in popular music by a post-war generation amid demographic upheavals and seismic shifts in technology. Over the past two decades, musicians associated with this period have produced a large amount of important autobiographical writing. This book situates these works -- in the forms of formal autobiographies and memoirs, auto-fiction, songs, and self-fashioned museum exhibitions -- within the context of the recent expansion of interest in autobiography, disability, and celebrity studies. It argues that these writings express anxiety over musical originality and authenticity, and seeks to dispel their writers'celebrity status and particularly the association with a lack of seriousness. These works often constitute a meditation on the nature of postmodern fame within a celebrity-obsessed culture, and paradoxically they aim to regain the private self in a public forum.
- Published
- 2022
49. Zwischen Atmosphäre und Narration : Zum Verhältnis von Musik, Sprache und Literatur im 20. und 21. Jahrhundert
- Author
-
Karl Katschthaler and Karl Katschthaler
- Subjects
- Music and literature, Narrative in music, Music--History and criticism.--20th century, Music--History and criticism.--21st century, Narrativite´ musicale, Musique--Histoire et critique.--21e sie`cle
- Abstract
Musik kann zweifellos als Medium, aber auch als intermediales Phänomen aufgefasst werden. In dieser Perspektive bewegt sie sich zwischen den Polen Sprechen und Schweigen, Hören und Lesen, Subjektivität und Intertextualität und ist dem Medium der Literatur somit alternierend nah und fern. Am Beispiel der Autoren Imre Kertész und Christoph Ransmayr sowie Komponist•innen aus dem 20. und 21. Jahrhundert wie Gustav Mahler, Alban Berg, John Cage, Annea Lockwood, Jennifer Walshe u.a. verortet Karl Katschthaler Musik und Klangkunst im unauflöslichen Spannungsverhältnis von Narration und Atmosphäre.
- Published
- 2022
50. The Oxford Handbook of Shakespeare and Music
- Author
-
Christopher R. Wilson, Mervyn Cooke, Christopher R. Wilson, and Mervyn Cooke
- Subjects
- Music and literature
- Abstract
The Oxford Handbook of Shakespeare and Music showcases the latest international research into the captivating and vast subject of the many uses of music in relation to Shakespeare's plays and poems, extending from the Bard's own time to the present day. The coverage is truly global in its scope, with ground-breaking studies of Shakespeare-related music in countries as diverse as China, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Russia, South Africa, Sweden, and the Soviet Union, as well as the Anglophone musical and theatrical traditions of the UK and USA. The range of genres surveyed is equally extensive, embracing music for theatre, opera, ballet, musicals, the concert hall, and film, in addition to Shakespeare's ongoing afterlives in folk music, jazz, and popular music. The authors take a range of diverse approaches in tackling their remits: some chapters investigate the evidence for performative practices in the Early Modern and later eras, while others offer detailed accounts of representative case studies, situating these firmly in their cultural contexts, or reflecting on the fascinating political and sociological ramifications of the music. As a whole, the Handbook provides a unique and impressively wide-ranging compendium of cutting-edge scholarship engaging with an extraordinarily rich body of music.
- Published
- 2022
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.