Poetry & Listening: The Noise of Lyric

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Listening has always mattered in poetry, but how does poetry change when listening has been transformed? In Poetry & Listening: The Noise of Lyric, the field of sound studies, which has revolutionised research in contemporary music, is brought into dialogue with new lyric criticism. Examining poetry as mediated by performance, technology and translation, this book discovers how contemporary poetry has been re-energised by the influence of recorded sound and influenced by the creative methods that emerged with it. It offers an exploration of contemporary poetry's acoustic contexts, moving beyond traditional analysis of poetic form to consider the social, political and ecological dimensions of a poem's sounds and silences. Through lucid engagement with a range of richly innovative English-language poetry from the UK and USA, it argues for the centrality of listening to a form of composition in which language not only represents sonic experience but is part of it. With reference to Jean-Luc Nancy's distinction between hearing and listening, alongside other key theorists of sound and noise, it shows how poetry offers insights into sensory perception, and how it charts acoustic relationships between language and the environment.

Author(s): Zoe Skoulding
Series: Poetry and LUP, 10
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Year: 2020

Language: English
Pages: 208
City: Liverpool

Cover
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Listening to Lyric and Noise
1 Song: Denise Riley’s Lyric and Rock Echoes
2 Noise: Sean Bonney’s Resistance
3 Acousmatics: Sounded/Silent Text in Caroline Bergvall’s Drift
4 Synaesthesia: Tuning in to Carol Watts and Mei-Mei Berssenbrugge
5 Echo: Claudia Rankine and Vahni Capildeo
6 Improvisation: Tom Raworth’s Intuition
7 Performance: Listening Bodies
8 Resounding: Peter Hughes, Jeff Hilson and Tim Atkins
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index