Abstract
Music may have a strong influence on literature. Many novels have reflected this by thematizing music in many different ways. However, this engagement can also adopt the form of an imitation or a formal presence that does not actually require the text to say anything about music. This paper aims to explore some aspects of musical imitation in literature that have not been analyzed in depth. Departing from the approach developed by Werner Wolf, I propose a distinction between imitating and imitated elements that applies to any case of study. Furthermore, at the core of this article, I advocate for a fourth dimension that the imitation of music in literature may have and that should be added to word music, formal and structural analogies, and imaginary content analogies. I call this fourth category “graphic analogies.” It implies an imitation whose imitating element is the graphic, written aspect of the linguistic signifier. Finally, this leads to the idea that, in the case of the imitation of music in literature, there is not a necessary correlation between imitating and imitated elements.
References
Benson, Stephen. 2006. Literary music: Writing music in contemporary fiction. Aldershot: Ashgate.Suche in Google Scholar
Burgess, Anthony. 1974. Napoleon symphony: A novel in four movements. London: Cape.Suche in Google Scholar
Burgess, Anthony. 1983. This man and music. New York: McGraw-Hill.Suche in Google Scholar
Burgess, Anthony. 1991. Mozart and the wolf gang. London: Hutchinson.Suche in Google Scholar
Culler, Jonathan. 1981. The pursuit of signs: Semiotics, literature, deconstruction. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.10.2307/3684090Suche in Google Scholar
Forster, Edward Morgan. 2000. Howards end. New York: Penguin.Suche in Google Scholar
Hallet, Wolfgang. 2009. The multimodal novel: The integration of modes and media in novelistic narration. In Sandra Heinen & Roy Sommer (eds.), Narratology in the age of cross-disciplinary narrative research, 129–153. Berlin & New York: Walter de Gruyter.10.1515/9783110222432.129Suche in Google Scholar
Hull, Katherine A. & Richard Kenneth Atkins. 2017. Peirce on perception and reasoning: From icons to logic. London: Routledge.10.4324/9781315444642Suche in Google Scholar
Huston, Nancy. 2008. Goldberg variations. Toronto: McArthur.Suche in Google Scholar
Jakobson, Roman. 1971. Word and language (Selected writings 2). The Hague & Paris: Mouton.10.1515/9783110873269Suche in Google Scholar
Jewitt, Carey. 2014. Introduction to part 1. In Jewitt Carey (ed.), The Routledge handbook of multimodal analysis, 2nd edn., 11–14. London & New York: Routledge.Suche in Google Scholar
Johnston, Maura. 2012. Organized noise. The Slate Book Review. 5 May. http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/books/2012/05/t_m_wolf_s_novel_sound_reviewed_.html (accessed 30 April 2018).Suche in Google Scholar
Kress, Gunther & Theo van Leeuwen. 2001. Multimodal discourse: The modes and media of contemporary communication. London: Hodder Arnold.Suche in Google Scholar
Litt, Toby. 2012. Sound: A novel by TM Wolf – Review. The Guardian. 20 July. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/jul/20/sound-novel-tm-wolf-review (accessed 30 April 2018).Suche in Google Scholar
Nattiez, Jean-Jacques. 1991. Music and discourse: Toward a semiology of music. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Suche in Google Scholar
Peirce, Charles S. 1982. In Max H. Fisch, Edward C. Moore & Christian J. W. Kloesel (eds.), Writings of Charles S. Peirce, 8 vols. Bloomington: Indiana University Press [Reference to Peirce’s writings will be designated W followed by volume and page number.].Suche in Google Scholar
Petermann, Emily. 2014. The musical novel: Imitation of musical structure, performance and reception in contemporary fiction. Rochester, NY: Camden House.10.1515/9781571138910Suche in Google Scholar
Pérez de Ayala, Ramón. 1998. Obras completas, vol. 1. Madrid: Biblioteca Castro.Suche in Google Scholar
Ruwet, Nicolas. 1972. Langage, musique, poésie. Paris: Seuil.Suche in Google Scholar
Saussure, Ferdinand de. 1971. Cours de linguistique générale. Paris: Payot.Suche in Google Scholar
Scher, Steven Paul. 1968. Verbal music in German literature (Yale Germanic Studies 2). New Haven: Yale University Press.Suche in Google Scholar
Scher, Steven Paul. 1970. Notes toward a theory of verbal music. Comparative Literature 22. 147–156. https://doi.org/10.2307/1769758.Suche in Google Scholar
Shockley, Alan. 2009. Music in the words: Musical form and counterpoint in the twentieth-century novel. Farnham: Ashgate.Suche in Google Scholar
Smith, Hazel. 2016. The contemporary literature-music relationship: Intermedia, voice,technology, cross-cultural exchange. New York & London: Routledge.10.4324/9781315723792Suche in Google Scholar
Smyth, Gerry. 2008. Music in contemporary British fiction: Listening to the novel. Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan.Suche in Google Scholar
Wolf, T. M. 2012. Sound. New York & London: Faber & Faber.Suche in Google Scholar
Wolf, Werner. 1999. The musicalization of fiction: A study in the theory and history of intermediality. Amsterdam & Atlanta: Rodopi.10.1163/9789004651197Suche in Google Scholar
Wolf, Werner. 2015. Literature and music: Theory. In Gabriele Rippl (ed.), Handbook of intermediality: Literature – image – sound – music. Berlin & Boston: De Gruyter.10.1515/9783110311075-026Suche in Google Scholar
© 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- Covenantal trust and semioethics: A reflection on interpersonal and intercultural summoning
- The semeiotic self
- Peirce’s diagrammatic reasoning and the cinema: Image, diagram, and narrative in The Shape of Water
- The three approaches to the semiotics of power
- Musical meaning and indexicality in the analysis of ceremonial mbira music
- The intersemiotic affordances of photography and poetry
- Graphic analogies in the imitation of music in literature
- Exploring the politics of visibility: Technology, digital representation, and the mediated workings of power
- Smart objects in daily life: Tackling the rise of new life forms in a semiotic perspective*
- The dagoba and the gopuram: A semiotic contrastive study of the Sinhalese Buddhist and Tamil Hindu cultures
- The Selfish Meme: Dawkins, Peirce, Freud
- Towards a semiotic model of interlingual translation
- Intermedial references and signification: Perception versus conception
- The “material function” in cinema: Resolving the paradox of the glitch
- Extending the embodied semiotic square: A cultural-semantic analysis of “Follow your Arrow”
- Time embodied as space in graphic narratives: A study in applied Peircean semiotics
- The origin of editorial images: Recycling, culture, and cognition
- Imago Dei: Metaphorical conceptualization of pictorial artworks within a participant-based framework
- On the origins of semiosic translation, the role of semiosis in translation and translating and the nature of sign systems: Response to Jia
- Special section: A sociosemiotic exploration of identity and discourse (Le Cheng, Ning Ye and David Machin, guest eds.)
- Introduction: A sociosemiotic exploration of identity and discourse
- The misleading nature of flow charts and diagrams in organizational communication: The case of performance management of preschools in Sweden
- A tentative analysis of legal terminology diachronic changes and the problem of communication effectiveness in legal settings
- Re-exploring Language development and identity construction of Hui nationality in China: a sociosemiotic perspective
- Evidentiality of court judgments in the People’s Republic of China: A semiotic perspective
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Research Articles
- Covenantal trust and semioethics: A reflection on interpersonal and intercultural summoning
- The semeiotic self
- Peirce’s diagrammatic reasoning and the cinema: Image, diagram, and narrative in The Shape of Water
- The three approaches to the semiotics of power
- Musical meaning and indexicality in the analysis of ceremonial mbira music
- The intersemiotic affordances of photography and poetry
- Graphic analogies in the imitation of music in literature
- Exploring the politics of visibility: Technology, digital representation, and the mediated workings of power
- Smart objects in daily life: Tackling the rise of new life forms in a semiotic perspective*
- The dagoba and the gopuram: A semiotic contrastive study of the Sinhalese Buddhist and Tamil Hindu cultures
- The Selfish Meme: Dawkins, Peirce, Freud
- Towards a semiotic model of interlingual translation
- Intermedial references and signification: Perception versus conception
- The “material function” in cinema: Resolving the paradox of the glitch
- Extending the embodied semiotic square: A cultural-semantic analysis of “Follow your Arrow”
- Time embodied as space in graphic narratives: A study in applied Peircean semiotics
- The origin of editorial images: Recycling, culture, and cognition
- Imago Dei: Metaphorical conceptualization of pictorial artworks within a participant-based framework
- On the origins of semiosic translation, the role of semiosis in translation and translating and the nature of sign systems: Response to Jia
- Special section: A sociosemiotic exploration of identity and discourse (Le Cheng, Ning Ye and David Machin, guest eds.)
- Introduction: A sociosemiotic exploration of identity and discourse
- The misleading nature of flow charts and diagrams in organizational communication: The case of performance management of preschools in Sweden
- A tentative analysis of legal terminology diachronic changes and the problem of communication effectiveness in legal settings
- Re-exploring Language development and identity construction of Hui nationality in China: a sociosemiotic perspective
- Evidentiality of court judgments in the People’s Republic of China: A semiotic perspective