The Figure of the Singer
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:4th Jul '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Why did poets continue to call themselves singers, and their poems songs, long after the formal link between poetry and music had been severed? Daniel Karlin explores the origin and meaning of the 'figure of the singer', tracing its roots in classical mythology and in the Bible, and following its rise from the 'adventurous song' of Milton's Paradise Lost to its apotheosis in the nineteenth century-by which time it had also become an oppressive cliché. Poets might embrace, or resist, this dominant figure of their art, but could not ignore it. Shadowing the metaphor is another figure, that of the literal singer, a source of fascination, and rivalry, to poets who are confined to words on the page. The book opens with an emblematic figure of the greatest of all 'singers': Homer, playing his lyre, at the centre of the frieze of poets on the Albert Memorial in London. Chapters on the tragicomic rise and fall of 'the bard', on the link between female song and suffering, and on the metaphor of poetry as birdsong, are followed by detailed readings of poems by Tennyson, Robert Browning, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Walt Whitman, and Thomas Hardy. The final chapter, on the songs of Bob Dylan, suggests that recording technology has given fresh impetus to the quarrel (which is also a love-affair) between poetic language and song. The Figure of the Singer offers a profound and stimulating analysis of the idea of poetry as song and of the complex, troubled relations between voice and text
... he [Karlin] is excellent, as we might expect, on echoes between the Brownings ... in general, this is an intriguing new perspective on an old, ubiquitous metaphor, and at its best, a riverting account of how the figure of the singer is turned by some nineteehth-century poets to bring out the doubleness of voice and text, performance and print, which lies at the heart of poetry itself. * Angela Leighton, The Times Literary Supplement *
The Figure of the Singer will be a useful complement to any interdisciplinary study of literature and music ... It is a beautifully written, clearly argued contribution to the age-old inquiry into the efficacy and joy of the arts * Jessica Fay, English Studies Review *
striking ... an admirable work * John Morton, Tennyson Research Bulletin *
ISBN: 9780199213986
Dimensions: 241mm x 162mm x 20mm
Weight: 528g
232 pages