Elliptical Sound: Audibility and the Space of Reading

Written by Julie Beth Napolin May 11, 2017

Download the chapter here: Elliptical Sound

This intersection between the aesthetic affect of a writer’s prose style and the acoustic experience of listening closely to voices also informs Julie Beth Napolin’s analysis of how readers are implicitly trained to attend to the racial signifiers of voice in literary form. Corresponding with Murphet’s theorisation of sounds that cannot be heard, Napolin’s reading of Jean Toomer, Ralph Ellison, and Ernest Hemingway reveals the elliptical narrative acoustics that indirectly mediate and reinforce the sounds of racially marked speech (Introduction: Sounding Modernism 1890-1950, 12).

From Sounding Modernism: Rhythm and Sonic Mediation in Modern Literature and Film, eds. Julian Murphet, Penelope Hone, and Helen Groth. Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh Press, 2017: 109-129.

Sounding Modernism.jpg

Share:
Professor Julie Beth Napolin

Julie Beth Napolin

Julie Beth Napolin studies the history and theory of sound and its intersections with the novel, film, art, performance, psychoanalysis, gender, and race, asking what practices of listening can tell us about the politics of memory and form. She is the co-Editor of the William Faulkner Journal, a member of the editorial board of Sound Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal, and the former President of the New School chapter of the American Association of University Professors. She received her PhD in Rhetoric from UC Berkeley.

[email protected]

Privacy Policy :: Terms of Use :: Contact
© 2024. All Rights reserved