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Music in the Words: Musical Form and Counterpoint in the Twentieth-Century Novel

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There is a strong tradition of literary analyses of the musical artwork.

Simply put, all musicology - any writing about music - is an attempt at making analogies between what happens within the world of sound and language itself.

This study considers this analogy from the opposite perspective: authors attempting to structure words using musical forms and techniques.

It's a viewpoint much more rarely explored, and none of the extant studies of novelists' musical techniques have been done by musicians. Can a novel follow the form of a symphony and still succeed as a novel?

Can musical counterpoint be mimicked by words on a page? Alan Shockley begins looking for answers by examining music's appeal for novelists, and then explores two brief works, a prose fugue by Douglas Hofstadter, and a short story by Anthony Burgess modeled after a Mozart symphony. Analyses of three large, emblematic attempts at musical writing follow.

The much debated 'Sirens' episode of James Joyce's Ulysses, which the author famously likened to a fugue, Burgess' largely ignored Napoleon Symphony: A Novel in Four Movements, patterned on Beethoven's Eroica, and Joyce's Finnegans Wake, which Shockley examines as an attempt at composing a fully musicalized language. After these three larger analyses, Shockley discusses two quite recent brief novels, William Gaddis' novella Agapé Agape and David Markson's This is not a novel, proposing that each of these confounding texts coheres elegantly when viewed as a musically-structured work. From the perspective of a composer, Shockley offers the reader fresh tools for approaching these dense and often daunting texts.

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Product Details
Routledge
1138259802 / 9781138259805
Paperback / softback
11/11/2016
United Kingdom
206 pages
156 x 234 mm, 453 grams