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Sublime Noise: Musical Culture and the Modernist Writer

This dissertation examines the significance of noise for modernist culture. Noise functions as both a literal and figurative presence in the aural culture of the early twentieth century: as the sounds produced by modern life and as the social, institutional, and affective manifestations of modernity. The dissertation argues that modernist uses of dissonance and rhythm represent historically specific, embodied critical responses to an intensifying experience of sound. The phenomena indexed by noisewarfare, urbanization, industry, media, publicity, and rumorare mediated and critiqued through modes of dissonance, whose (irregular) movement through historical time is marked by rhythm. Musical uses of noise reveal art as an ideologically laden mediation of social experience: as composers and writers incorporate everyday noises into the artwork, they question art's autonomy and implicate the material conditions of modernity enabling artistic production. Building an interdisciplinary model for interpreting modernism's aesthetics and ideologies, the project draws on literary cultural studies; cultural histories of sound; political and semiotic accounts of musical interpretation; and the researches of the "new musicology." After outlining the project's theoretical bearings in Chapter One, the project studies T.S. Eliot's <i>Waste Land</i> alongside the work of Theodor Adorno, analyzing the figures' treatments of dissonance and rhythm as responses to allegorical treatments of the human body. Chapter Three argues that the interactions between George Antheil and Ezra Pound reveal the drives for publicity and sensation at the heart of Pound's neoclassical aesthetics. Chapter Four addresses James Joyce's treatments of music and noise, arguing that even his less "noisy" early works ground music in their material noises. Chapter Five argues that Edith Sitwell's and William Walton's <i>Façade</i> appropriates the aesthetics of the Ballets Russes to reveal social interactions and "publicity" as stylized aesthetic constructions. The final chapter focuses on music-noise relations in Benjamin Britten and E.M. Forster, examining each individually before turning to their collaboration on <i>Billy Budd</i>. Britten's uses of consonance destabilize the values traditionally accorded consonant harmony: stability, solidarity, transparency. <i>Billy Budd</i> thus calls attention to the acts of scapegoating and rumor at the heart of cultural consolidation.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VANDERBILT/oai:VANDERBILTETD:etd-10282008-094246
Date06 December 2008
CreatorsEpstein, Joshua Benjamin
ContributorsJonathan Neufeld, Carolyn Dever, Joy Calico, Mark Wollaeger
PublisherVANDERBILT
Source SetsVanderbilt University Theses
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
Sourcehttp://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu/available/etd-10282008-094246/
Rightsunrestricted, I hereby certify that, if appropriate, I have obtained and attached hereto a written permission statement from the owner(s) of each third party copyrighted matter to be included in my thesis, dissertation, or project report, allowing distribution as specified below. I certify that the version I submitted is the same as that approved by my advisory committee. I hereby grant to Vanderbilt University or its agents the non-exclusive license to archive and make accessible, under the conditions specified below, my thesis, dissertation, or project report in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all other ownership rights to the copyright of the thesis, dissertation or project report. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis, dissertation, or project report.

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