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About The Book
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Why does poetry appeal to music? Can music be said to communicate as language does? What between music and poetry is it possible to translate? These fundamental questions have remained obstinately difficult despite the recent burgeoning of word and music studies. Peter Dayan contends that the reasons for this difficulty were worked out with extraordinary rigour and consistency in a French literary tradition echoed by composers such as Berlioz and Debussy which stretches from Sand to Derrida. Their writing shows how it is both necessary and futile to look for music in poetry or for poetry in music: necessary because each art defines itself by reference to what it is not and cannot be in order to point to an idealized totality outside itself; futile because the musicality of poetry like the poetic meaning of music must remain as elusive as that idealized totality; its distance is the very condition of the art. Thus is generated a subtle but unmistakable general definition of the nature of art which has proved uniquely able to survive all the probings of poststructuralism. That definition of art is inseparable from a disturbingly effective scepticism towards all forms of explication and explanation in critical discourse so it is doubtless not surprising that critics in general have done their best to ignore it. But by bringing out what Sand Baudelaire Mallarmé Proust Debussy Berlioz Barthes and Derrida all do in the same way as they work on the limits of the analogy between music and literature this book shows how it is possible productive illuminating and fascinating to work on those limits; though to do so as we find repeatedly in Chopin's dreams as in Derrida's 'tombeaux' requires us to have the courage to face in music our literal death and the limits of our intelligence.