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Phonopoetics: The Making of Early Literary Recordings

Phonopoetics: The Making of Early Literary Recordings

  • Author: Camlot, Jason
Camlot challenges assumptions of contemporary literary criticism by taking the heard audio-text as a primary object of analysis....Recommended." -- S. Schmidt Horning

Book

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Contents

  • Contents and AbstractsIntroduction: Introduction: Audiotextual Criticism chapter abstract
  • The introduction explores the strange sonic and material qualities of early sound recordings and outlines a methodology for the critical study of early spoken recordings as literary artifacts. It defines concepts that are at the core of the book, includin
  • 1The Voice of the Phonograph chapter abstract
  • Chapter 1 analyzes the early promotional discourse surrounding the phonograph as a medium of natural fidelity and then situates the idea of the phonograph as a "pure voice" medium within the context of popular recitation anthologies in order to identify k
  • 2Charles Dickens in Three Minutes or Less: Early Phonographic Fiction chapter abstract
  • Chapter 2 focuses on the development and production of the earliest sound recordings drawn from the novels of Charles Dickens. The Dickens recordings of Bransby Williams and William Sterling Battis stand as the earliest fiction-based audio adaptations pro
  • 3Alfred, Lord Tennyson's Spectral Energy: Historical Intonation in Dramatic Recitation chapter abstract
  • Chapter 3 tells the story of the multiple recordings made between 1890 and 1920, both by the poet himself and by actors and elocutionists, of Tennyson's poem "The Charge of The Light Brigade." It analyzes the kinds of performance and genre that informed t
  • 4T. S. Eliot's Recorded Experiments in Modernist Verse Speaking chapter abstract
  • Chapter 4 offers a series of interpretive takes on T. S. Eliot's 1930s electrically recorded voice experiments in reading his poem The Waste Land aloud. It traces Eliot's attempt to invent a way to read modernist poetry. Explaining the production context
  • Conclusion: Conclusion: Analog, Digital, Conceptual chapter abstract
  • The Conclusion to Phonopoetics explores conceptions of voice preservation and models of the voice archive. It takes early ideas of the audible archival artifact (the sound recording) and the event-oriented scenario of its use as useful points of departure