ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Edinburgh University Press
FORMAT: Hardback
ISBN: 9781474402927
RRP: £70.00
PAGES: 254
PUBLICATION DATE:
October 31, 2016
BUY THIS BOOK
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate we earn from qualifying purchases.
Lyric Cousins: Poetry and Musical Form
Fiona Sampson
Today, poetry and art music occupy similar cultural positions: each has a tendency to be regarded as problematic, ‘difficult’ and therefore ‘elitist’. Despite this, the audiences and numbers of participants for each are substantial: yet they tend not to overlap. This is odd, because the forms share early history in song and saga, and have some striking similarities, often summed up in the word ‘lyric’.? These similarities include much that is most significant to the experience of each, and so of most interest to practitioners and audiences. They encompass, at the very least: the way each art-form is aural, and takes place in time; a shared reliance on temporal, rather than spatial, forms; an engagement with sensory experience and pleasure; availability for both shared public performance and private reading, sight-reading and hearing in memory; and scope for non-denotative meaning. In other words, looking at these elements in music is a way to look at them in poetry, and vice versa. This is a study of these two formal craft traditions that is concerned with the similarities in their roles, structures, projects and capacities.
Fiona Sampson
Fiona Sampson is Professor of Poetry at the University of Roehampton, where she is the Director of the Poetry Centre and Editor of Poem. She has an interest in international contemporary poetry and is published in thirty-seven languages. She is currently at work on a biography of Mary Shelley, and her new collection The Catch appeared in 2016.