Harry White examines the influence of music in the development of the Irish literary imagination from 1800 to the present day. He identifies music as a preoccupation which originated in the poetry of Thomas Moore early in the nineteenth century. He argues that this preoccupation decisively influenced Moore's attempt to translate the 'meaning' of Irish music into verse, and that it also informed Moore's considerable impact on the development of European musical romanticism, as in the music of Berlioz and Schumann. White then examines how this preoccupation was later recovered by W.B. Yeats, whose poetry is imbued with music as a rival presence to language. In its readings of Yeats, Synge, Shaw and Joyce, the book argues that this striking musical awareness had a profound influence on the Irish literary imagination, to the extent that poetry, fiction and drama could function as correlatives of musical genres. Although Yeats insisted on the synonymous condition of speech and song in his poetry, Synge, Shaw and Joyce explicitly identified opera in particular as a generic prototype for their own work. Synge's formal musical training and early inclinations as a composer, Shaw's perception of himself as the natural successor to Wagner, and Joyce's no less striking absorption of a host of musical techniques in his fiction are advanced in this study as formative (rather than incidental) elements in the development of modern Irish writing. Music and the Irish Literary Imagination also considers Beckett's emancipation from the oppressive condition of words in general (and Joyce in particular) through the agency of music, and argues that the strong presence of Mendelssohn, Chopin and Janácek in the works of Brian Friel is correspondingly essential to Friel's dramatisation of Irish experience in the aftermath of Beckett. The book closes with a reading of Seamus Heaney, in which the poet's own preoccupation with the currency of established literary forms is enlisted to illuminate Heaney's abiding sense of poetry as music.
"The Well-Tempered Festschrift" reflects on each of the essays in "Music Preferred" in turn, and it also accounts for the circumstances in which Harry White met the contributors to "Music Preferred" throughout the course of his working life ...
This book addresses the relationship between music and cultural history in Ireland. It variously identifies and examines the development of music as an outgrowth of extra-musical concepts and socio-cultural entities,...
In 1948 the American scholar Calvin S. Brown published Music and Literature: A Comparison of the Arts—a wide-ranging study based on the premise that 'music and literature have many points in common', but with the important caveat that ...
Brian Singleton: Oscar Asche, Orientalism, and British Musical Comedy. Westport, Conn., and London: Praeger, 2004, p. 110. Said: Orientalism, pp. 214–215. Robert Hichens: “Skirting the Balkan Peninsula: From Trieste to Constantinople.
His work invites us in with music charming to the ear, then it plays an echo game-with Yeats and Heaney, and especially Larkin. The Kenmare Occurrences salutes these poets as the collection sails into its own Byzantium, its own Ireland.
The results were a form of music that relied upon an imagined past for a sense of its own worth; that fetishised ethnic melody as the ... It rests on the premise that music is the 'sovereign ghost' of the Irish literary imagination.
White, Harry (1995), 'Music and the Irish Literary Imagination', in Gillen, Gerard and White, Harry (eds), Irish Musical Studies 3: Music and Irish Cultural history, Dublin: Irish Academic Press, pp. 212–27.
J. Borgonovo, 'Politics as Leisure: Brass Bands in Cork, 1845–1918', in L. Lane and W. Murphy (eds.), Leisure and the Irish in the Nineteenth Century (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2016), pp. 23–40. 86.
Lionel Pilkington, Theatre and Ireland (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), 26–7, citing Alan J. Fletcher, Drama and the Performing Arts in PreCromwellian Ireland: A Repertory of Sources and Documents from the Earliest Times (Cork: ...
"This book addresses the relationship between music and cultural history in Ireland. It variously identifies and examines the development of music as an outgrowth of extra-musical concepts and socio-cultural entities,...