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Angela Carter And Folk Music Invisible Music Prose And The Art Of Canorography Polly Paulusma

  • SKU: BELL-50233534
Angela Carter And Folk Music Invisible Music Prose And The Art Of Canorography Polly Paulusma
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Angela Carter And Folk Music Invisible Music Prose And The Art Of Canorography Polly Paulusma instant download after payment.

Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
File Extension: PDF
File size: 39.38 MB
Author: Polly Paulusma
ISBN: 9781350296282, 9781350296312, 1350296287, 1350296317
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Angela Carter And Folk Music Invisible Music Prose And The Art Of Canorography Polly Paulusma by Polly Paulusma 9781350296282, 9781350296312, 1350296287, 1350296317 instant download after payment.

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.
Paulusma examines the influences of folk singing praxis on Angela Carter’s prose writing. Recent critics have analysed Carter’s profound relationship with folk and fairy tales, but her somatic experience of folk singing requires a discrete analysis. A newly-unearthed private archive of Carter’s folk song notations and recordings, her diaries, essays, album sleeve notes and undergraduate dissertation, together suggest a reimagining of Carter’s prose as a vehicle for her ‘singing’ ‘voice’, revealing a ‘canorographic’ writing style imbued with ‘songfulness’ which she learned from singing. Voice theorists (Idhe 1976, Connor 2002, Dolar 2006) suggest we become occupied by the imagined ‘voice’ of the text when we read, but not enough attention has been paid to the porous boundaries that exist between song and prose, nor to qualities of ‘songfulness’ described in relation to song by Lawrence Kramer (2002), here applied uniquely to prose. Paulusma reads Carter’s texts ‘through’ the songs she knew, and shows, from influences of rhythm, melodic shape, thematic focus, imagery, ‘voice’ and ‘breath’, how she buried folk song’s features structurally into her writing to produce ‘canorography’ — song-infused prose, informed by the pleasures of her singing experience, and emergent in the semantic excesses of her prose syntax and its sounded potential in ‘performance’. Paulusma focuses on gender fluidities, sonic geographies, picaresque journeys, and the significances of chimeric avianthropes, to reveal Carter’s singing ‘voice’ imbricated in the text, and then analyzes musicologically the folk songs of contemporary artist Emily Portman, to show Carter’s onward ‘songful’ trajectory in a cycle of influences. This original methodological approach stitches together aspects of archival, literary and musicological research to present a truly interdiscipinary body of work. Paulusma proposes further research into ‘canorography’, and the implications of reimagining prose as audial ‘performance’, before concluding that Carter asks us to ‘perform’ every time we read her, creating, between her text and the body of the reader, an ever-renewing sympathetic resonance.

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