Music and the Written Word

A special issue of Humanities (ISSN 2076-0787).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 December 2024 | Viewed by 6157

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
College of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences, Flinders University, Adelaide 5000, Australia
Interests: music and literature; Jane Austen; Iris Murdoch; J.M. Coetzee; V.S. Naipaul; Matthew Flinders

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Words and song have long been thought to spring from the same expressive impulse. In Disgrace, JM Coetzee writes that "the origins of speech lie in song, and the origins of song in the need to fill out with sound the overlarge and rather empty human soul". But what happens when the spoken word becomes text? To what extent can written language behave as though it were a type of music—or music act as a language? This Special Issue will explore the many ways in which music and literature may be linked: music as a theme and a motif in fiction; rhetorical links between music and language in literary texts; the musician as author and the author as musician. Some questions which might be addressed include:

  • What is the nature of the challenge faced by a composer setting a literary text to music, and what makes a song succeed?
  • What is lost, and what is found, when a literary work is transformed into an opera?
  • Can instrumental music tell a story, or move beyond mimesis of extra-musical sounds to convey abstract ideas?
  • What are the limits of writing about music? How can words convey music’s effect and its affect?
  • How do oft-repeated narratives about composers’ personal lives affect the reception of their music?

Scholars and practitioners in both music and literature are invited to submit proposals for this Special Issue. Practice-based, empirical, and theoretical approaches are all welcome.

Dr. Gillian Dooley
Guest Editor

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Published Papers (4 papers)

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Research

18 pages, 306 KiB  
Article
How the Music Machine Makes Myths Real: AI, Holograms, and Ashley Eternal
by Victor Robert Kennedy
Humanities 2024, 13(5), 140; https://doi.org/10.3390/h13050140 - 21 Oct 2024
Viewed by 857
Abstract
Since ancient times, music has been instrumental in giving life to the stories we build our identities and cultures around. I will examine how, in our time, music creates new myths by creating its own heroes and heroines through capital and the star [...] Read more.
Since ancient times, music has been instrumental in giving life to the stories we build our identities and cultures around. I will examine how, in our time, music creates new myths by creating its own heroes and heroines through capital and the star system. In traditional literary and cultural analysis, a distinction was drawn between the natural and the supernatural when discussing literary mythology; in the twentieth century, an equivalent distinction was made in works of art that, in Baudrillard’s terminology, make use of the realms of the real and the “hyperreal” (1981). In today’s mythmaking, the supernatural has been largely replaced by the technological, and recent developments blur the line between science fiction and fantasy; tech has become megalotech. A recent episode of the television series Black Mirror, “Rachel, Jack, and Ashley Too” (2019), explores these concepts with an examination of the pros and cons of replacing human performers with AI simulacra. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Music and the Written Word)
20 pages, 4297 KiB  
Article
‘After All the Years of Separation’: Musically Representing Author L.M. Montgomery’s Suspended Romances
by Merri Bell
Humanities 2024, 13(4), 104; https://doi.org/10.3390/h13040104 - 11 Aug 2024
Viewed by 672
Abstract
Canadian author L.M. Montgomery did not set out to write stories about romance. As she indicated in her journals, she wrote character-driven stories of young girls navigating their way through girlhood. However, she understood that the public, and her publishers, expected these girls [...] Read more.
Canadian author L.M. Montgomery did not set out to write stories about romance. As she indicated in her journals, she wrote character-driven stories of young girls navigating their way through girlhood. However, she understood that the public, and her publishers, expected these girls to experience romance that culminated in marriage, following the societal traditions of the time. Montgomery managed this dichotomy by having many characters experience a suspended romance, delaying the romantic aspect of the relationship for as long as possible. Arts-based practice is a mode of analysis and offers the opportunity to find a new way of understanding and communicating Montgomery’s type of suspended romance. Music is, in many ways, considered romantic, so it is an appropriate medium to communicate Montgomery’s romantic narrative structures. This paper investigates Montgomery’s use of suspended romance in her novels and how this delay provided her characters with time to develop other areas of their lives. An arts-based methodology was used to identify and analyse recurring themes in Montgomery’s work, as the question is not can Montgomery’s theme of romance be musically represented but how. The result of this creative experimentation is a new musical composition that articulates these suspended romances using six different musical devices. This creative work exemplifies the intertextual link that exists between Montgomery’s work and new musical compositions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Music and the Written Word)
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15 pages, 230 KiB  
Article
Bruce Springsteen, Rock Poetry, and Spatial Politics of the Promised Land
by Shankhadeep Chattopadhyay
Humanities 2024, 13(3), 75; https://doi.org/10.3390/h13030075 - 13 May 2024
Viewed by 1134
Abstract
The humanistic-geographical associations of popular music foster the potential to articulate the production and reproduction of an activity-centered politicized ontology of space in the everyday social life of any creative communitarian framework where an alternative set of lifestyles, choices, and tastes engage in [...] Read more.
The humanistic-geographical associations of popular music foster the potential to articulate the production and reproduction of an activity-centered politicized ontology of space in the everyday social life of any creative communitarian framework where an alternative set of lifestyles, choices, and tastes engage in a constant play. A cursory glimpse at the (counter-)cultural artistic productions of the American 1970s shows that the lyrical construction of real and imaginary geographical locales has remained a distinguishing motif in the song-writing techniques of the celebrated rock poets. In the case of Bruce Springsteen, whether it is the ‘badlands’, constituting the rebellious and notorious young adults, or the ‘promised land’, which is the desired destination of all his characters, his lyrical oeuvre has numerously provided an alternative sense of place. Springsteen’s lyrical and musical characterization of fleeting urban images like alleys, hotels, engines, streets, neon, pavements, locomotives, cars, etc., have not only captured the American cities under the changing regime of capital accumulation but also contributed to the inseparability of everyday social lives and modern urban experiences. Against the backdrop of this argument, this article seeks to explore how the socio-political and cultural aesthetics of Springsteen’s song stories unfurl distinct spatial poetics through their musical language. Also, the article attempts to delineate how Springsteen’s unabashed celebration of the working-class geography of the American 1970s unveils a site of cultural struggle, wherein existing social values are reconstructed amidst imaginary landscapes and discursive strategies of resistance are weaved. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Music and the Written Word)
14 pages, 266 KiB  
Article
“The Noise of Our Living”: Richard Wright and Chicago Blues
by Jeff Wimble
Humanities 2024, 13(1), 28; https://doi.org/10.3390/h13010028 - 31 Jan 2024
Viewed by 1549
Abstract
Historicizing the musical genre known as “Chicago blues,” I further complicate Richard Wright’s already complicated attitudes toward “the folk” and modernity. Utilizing close readings of 12 Million Black Voices, I show how Wright’s apparent denigration of the blues as an outmoded, pre-modern [...] Read more.
Historicizing the musical genre known as “Chicago blues,” I further complicate Richard Wright’s already complicated attitudes toward “the folk” and modernity. Utilizing close readings of 12 Million Black Voices, I show how Wright’s apparent denigration of the blues as an outmoded, pre-modern artistic form is dependent on his historical situation writing before the advent of a new electrified form of blues that developed in Chicago shortly after the book’s publication. Utilizing biographical details of the life of Muddy Waters, I show how his work as a musician in Mississippi, then in Chicago, and his development of an electrified blues style, parallels and personifies the shift from an African American perspective rooted in an agrarian, pre-modern south to an industrial, modern north documented so effectively by Wright. Furthermore, the Chicago blues musicians’ transmogrification of the rural Delta blues into an electrified, urban expression manifests the vernacular-modernist artistic conception which Wright seems to be envisioning and pointing toward in 12 Million Black Voices. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Music and the Written Word)

Planned Papers

The below list represents only planned manuscripts. Some of these manuscripts have not been received by the Editorial Office yet. Papers submitted to MDPI journals are subject to peer-review.

Title: “Of selfish grief or gladness”: Farewells in Berlioz’s Harold in Italy

Abstract: Lord Byron’s life and poetic works have inspired musical compositions across genres even during his lifetime. The English author’s fictional characters and themes impressed musician composers of nineteenth-century Europe, especially since his Byronic heroes were conflated with their creators’ own melancholic and revolutionary persona. In contrast to the songs and operas, the programme music has raised doubts towards a direct correlation with its poetic programme, however. While verse extracts provided as epigraphs to the music help direct listeners to specific ideas, their absence has prompted dismissals of intermedial relationships, even those proposed by the composers. This article discusses major connections between Hector Berlioz’s Harold in Italy, a Symphony in Four Parts with Viola Obbligato (1834) and Byron’s semi-autobiographical narrative poem Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage: A Romaunt (1812–1818). The title and movement headings of the instrumental piece, as well as the composer’s memoirs, refer to Byron’s Childe Harold as the main inspiration. Nevertheless, references to the composer’s visit to Abbruzzi mountains, his fascination with Italian songs, the previous title, the self-borrowed musical lines, the mention of brigands, and the personal response component sustain debate. In applying my three-fold analytical method, I attempt to clarify what indefinite elements were transmitted from the source to the target art medium. I examine historical-biographical contexts and compositional devices of both the poetry and the music by deploying melopoetics and musical semiotics. Observations on interactions among microcosmic elements and macrocosmic structures in the music and their poetic analogues serve to evaluate how they encapsulate Byron’s legacy.

Title: “‘Ring the bells’: Gothic sounds in Garth Nix’s Old Kingdom”

Abstract: Australian author Garth Nix has set six critically acclaimed and internationally bestselling novels in and around the fictional world of the Old Kingdom, beginning with Sabriel (1995) and continuing most recently with Terciel & Elinor (2021). This loose series of novels, with its bellringing protagonists, is the prime contributor to his reputation as an author of fantasy fiction, although he is also marketed as and known for writing science fiction. There is, however, an overlooked case for considering all his novels as falling within the tradition of the Gothic. In the arena of sound and silence, for instance, Nix’s Old Kingdom writing frequently draws for visceral effect on literary devices first exemplified by early Gothic writers (Lewis, Radcliffe, Maturin et al), which places his work in stark contrast to that of authors in other traditions of the Fantastic (as defined by, for example, Helen Dell). This article examines Nix’s deployment of these sonic tropes and techniques, evident in many examples of sound, silence, and music in the texts, using as key guides Lucie Ratail and Isabella van Elferen’s separate analyses of the sonorous Gothic.

Title: Devotee Smarter than Guru: Rituparno Ghosh’s Bold Experiments with Tagore’s Songs in His Cinema

Abstract: Film directors from both Bangladesh and West Bengal (in India) have frequently used Rabindranath Tagore’s songs in films belonging to a motley range of genres. The songs have been utilized to serve several purposes in these films. The most popular use of a Tagore song in Bengali cinema is to add to the build-up of the atmosphere of the scene in which it features. Next comes the structural use. In such cases, the song contributes to the development of the film’s plot or storyline. Finally, Tagore’s songs have also been used to illuminate a film maker’s message to the audience. If these uses can be characterized as conservative (in the sense that they don’t take any liberty with the content or intent of the song lyrics nor with the style of singing usually associated with those songs), we can identify a use that’s not only deviant but, in some cases, outright radical. One prominent practitioner of this radical deployment of Tagore’s songs in Bengali cinema is Rituparno Ghosh (1963-2013). A relentless champion of representing queer and transgender experience on the silver screen, Ghosh has boldly experimented with three iconic Tagore novels in adapting them for his films. This radical bent is also seen in the way Ghosh has appropriated some of Tagore’s songs not only in the three films based on Tagore’s fiction but also in those whose source of inspiration is other than Tagore. In this article, I examine some of Ghosh’s films to understand the meaning of his radical experiments with Tagore’s songs and the formal strategies he adopts in achieving the objectives of those experiments.

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