Description
Book SynopsisAn interdisciplinary exploration of how writers have conveyed sound through text. Edited by Christopher Cannon and Steven Justice, The Sound of Writing explores the devices and techniques that writers have used to represent sound and how they have changed over time. Contributors consider how writing has channeled sounds as varied as the human voice and the buzzing of bees using not only alphabets but also the resources of the visual and musical arts. Cannon and Justice have assembled a constellation of classicists, medievalists, modernists, literary historians, and musicologists to trace the sound of writing from the beginning of the Western record to poetry written in the last century. This rich series of essays considers the writings of Sappho, Simonides, Aldhem, Marcabru, Dante Alighieri, William Langland, Charles Butler, Tennyson, Gertrude Stein, and T. S. Eliot as well as poems and songs in Ancient Greek, Old and Middle English, Italian, Old French, Occitan, and modern English.
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments
Introduction
Christopher Cannon and Steven Justice
1. The Sounds and Matter of Women in Ancient Greek Epigrams
Sarah Nooter
2. Reading Impressions: The Sound of the Sight of Occitan Verse
Sarah Kay
3. Voices and Bees: The Evolution of Charles Butler's Acoustic Book
Jennifer Richards
4. Prosodic Protocols and Interruptions of Them in Piers Plowman
Ian Cornelius
5. Latin Verse in Old English Accents
Emily V. Thornbury
6. The Writing of Sound
Meredith Martin
7. Music Writing and Music History in a Thirteenth-Century Song
Sean Curran
8. "Where the Sì Sounds": Dante's Dissonant Vernaculars and Their Sensual Signs
Alison Cornish
9. The Phenomenology of -e
Christopher Cannon
10. Writing Reading Rhythm
Christopher Hasty
Contributors
Index