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Journal ArticleDOI

New Modes of Listening: The Mediality of Musical Novels

Emily Petermann
- 01 Jan 2017 - 
- Vol. 15, Iss: 1, pp 69-79
TLDR
In this paper, the authors compare two recent musical novels that foreground the mass media of musical expression, Nick Hornby's High Fidelity (1995) and Arthur Phillips's The Song Is You (2009), and explore modes of listening as characters experience their lives through the lens of popular music.
Abstract
A recent development in literature’s engagement with music involves the role played by emerging technologies and the way they not only transmit musical content to the listener, but very strongly condition the form the music takes and the way we listen. While music is still often considered ephemeral and transcendent, there is a new recognition of it as an object and a commodity, whether an LP record or a file to be downloaded from itunes. Technologies coexist; records are now collected and venerated in a nostalgic mode while music moves into the digital sphere of downloads and participatory cultures of online sharing. Contemporary literature can tell us not only about the idealization of music as a non-referential and thus “higher” art, but about the way music is mediated by technologies. The present paper focuses on two recent musical novels that foreground the mass media of musical expression, Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity (1995) and Arthur Phillips’s The Song Is You (2009). Both celebrate songs — incorporated as records in the former and digital files on an ipod in the latter — as symbols of taste, carriers of memory, means of establishing interpersonal connections, and media that condition our thinking. Songs also exist in relation to others, demonstrated by the protagonist’s fixation on lists modeled on radio’s top-forty rankings in High Fidelity and on juxtaposition of songs on the ipod’s shuffle mode in The Song Is You . The comparison of these novels in terms of their focus on different musical technologies leads to an exploration of modes of listening as characters experience their lives through the lens of popular music.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

‘Modulation’ by Richard Powers: Digital sound, compression and the short story

TL;DR: Powers’s compressed prose is read as a formal iteration of the data compression the story narrates, suggesting that ‘Modulation’ offers an alternative to representing information through an excess of data.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Act of Reading: A Theory of Aesthetic Response

TL;DR: Iser as discussed by the authors describes the "time flow" of reading, the "wandering viewpoint" which the reader must adopt in the "continual interplay between modified expectations and transformed memories" (p. 111).
Book

Speaking into the Air: A History of the Idea of Communication

TL;DR: Peters as discussed by the authors traces the yearning for contact not only through philosophy and literature but also by exploring the cultural reception of communication technologies from the telegraph to the radio and finds that thinkers across the centuries have struggled with the same questions - how we can hope for contact with others, what has become of human beings in increasingly technological times, how new modes of communication have altered the ways the world is imagined and how we relate to others.
Journal ArticleDOI

The act of reading : a theory of aesthetic response

Wolfgang Iser
- 21 Jan 1980 - 
TL;DR: Iser examines what happens during the reading process and how it is basic to the development of a theory of aesthetic response, setting in motion a chain of events that depends both on the text and the exercise of certain human faculties as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reification and Utopia in Mass Culture

Fredric Jameson
- 24 Jan 1979 - 
TL;DR: This article argued that high culture is an establishment phenomenon, irredeemably tainted by its association with institutions, in particular with the university, and the pursuit of high or hermetic culture is then stigmatized as a status hobby of small groups of intellectuals.
Book

Sound Moves: iPod Culture and Urban Experience

Michael Bull
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the way in which we use sound to construct key areas of our daily lives and demonstrate how and why the spaces of the city are being transformed right in front of our ears.