Jason Camlot 
Phonopoetics [PDF ebook] 
The Making of Early Literary Recordings

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Phonopoetics tells the neglected story of early ‘talking records’ and their significance for literature, from the 1877 invention of the phonograph to some of the first recorded performances of modernist works. The book challenges assumptions of much contemporary criticism by taking the recorded, oral performance as its primary object of analysis and by exploring the historically specific convergences between audio recording technologies, media formats, generic forms, and the institutions and practices surrounding the literary. Opening with an argument that the earliest spoken recordings were a mediated extension of Victorian reading and elocutionary culture, Jason Camlot explains the literary significance of these pre-tape era voice artifacts by analyzing early promotional fantasies about the phonograph as a new kind of speaker and detailing initiatives to deploy it as a pedagogical tool to heighten literary experience. Through historically-grounded interpretations of Dickens impersonators to recitations of Tennyson to T.S. Eliot’s experimental readings of ‘The Waste Land’ and of a great variety of voices and media in between, this first critical history of the earliest literary sound recordings offers an unusual perspective on the transition from the Victorian to modern periods and sheds new light on our own digitally mediated relationship to the past.

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表中的内容

Introduction: Audiotextual Criticism
1. The Voice of the Phonograph
2. Charles Dickens in Three Minutes or Less: Early Phonographic Fiction
3. Alfred, Lord Tennyson’s Spectral Energy: Historical Intonation in Dramatic Recitation
4. T. S. Eliot’s Recorded Experiments in Modernist Verse Speaking
Conclusion: Analog, Digital, Conceptual

关于作者

Poet, songwriter, and scholar
Jason Camlot is Professor of English and Associate Dean in the Faculty of Arts and Science at Concordia University.

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语言 英语 ● 格式 PDF ● 网页 248 ● ISBN 9781503609716 ● 文件大小 10.4 MB ● 出版者 Stanford University Press ● 发布时间 2019 ● 版 1 ● 下载 24 个月 ● 货币 EUR ● ID 6880961 ● 复制保护 Adobe DRM
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