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The Fact of Resonance: Modernist Acoustics and Narrative Form
Contributor(s): Napolin, Julie Beth (Author)
ISBN: 0823288161     ISBN-13: 9780823288168
Publisher: Fordham University Press
OUR PRICE:   $31.35  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: June 2020
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | Modern - 20th Century
- Music | History & Criticism - General
- Philosophy | Aesthetics
Dewey: 809.933
LCCN: 2020903278
Series: Idiom: Inventing Writing Theory
Physical Information: 0.81" H x 6" W x 9" (1.17 lbs) 288 pages
Themes:
- Chronological Period - 20th Century
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Shortlisted, 2021 Memory Studies Association First Book Award

The Fact of Resonance returns to the colonial and technological contexts in which theories of the novel developed, seeking in sound an alternative premise for theorizing modernist narrative form. Arguing that narrative theory has been founded on an exclusion of sound, the book poses a missing counterpart to modernism's question "who speaks?" in the hidden acoustical questions "who hears?" and "who listens?"

For Napolin, the experience of reading is undergirded by the sonic. The book captures and enhances literature's ambient sounds, sounds that are clues to heterogeneous experiences secreted within the acoustical unconscious of texts. The book invents an oblique ear, a subtle and lyrical prose style attuned to picking up sounds no longer hearable. "Resonance" opens upon a new genealogy of modernism, tracking from Joseph Conrad to his interlocutors--Sigmund Freud, Frantz Fanon, W. E. B. Du Bois, William Faulkner, and Chantal Akerman--the racialized, gendered, and colonial implications of acoustical figures that "drift" through and are transformed by narrative worlds in writing, film, and music.

A major synthesis of resources gleaned from across the theoretical humanities, the book argues for "resonance" as the traversal of acoustical figures across the spaces of colonial and technological modernity, figures registering and transmitting transformations of "voice" and "sound" across languages, culture, and modalities of hearing. We have not yet sufficiently attended to relays between sound, narrative, and the unconscious that are crucial to the ideological entailments and figural strategies of transnational, transatlantic, and transpacific modernism. The breadth of the book's engagements will make it of interest not only to students and scholars of modernist fiction and sound studies, but to anyone interested in contemporary critical theory.


Contributor Bio(s): Napolin, Julie Beth: - Julie Beth Napolin is Assistant Professor of Digital Humanities in the Literature Program at The New School for Liberal Arts. She has published widely on sound, media, and literature in qui parle, Symploke, Sounding Out!, and Social Text, and in such volumes as Vibratory Modernism, Sounding Modernism, and Fifty Years after Faulkner. In 2012, she was awarded a Bruce Harkness Young Scholar Award by the Joseph Conrad Society of America.