Listening to Iris Murdoch: Music, Sounds, and Silences

Author:   Gillian Dooley ,  Ernest M. Kim
Publisher:   Springer International Publishing AG
Edition:   1st ed. 2022
ISBN:  

9783031008597


Pages:   241
Publication Date:   16 June 2022
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Listening to Iris Murdoch: Music, Sounds, and Silences


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Full Product Details

Author:   Gillian Dooley ,  Ernest M. Kim
Publisher:   Springer International Publishing AG
Imprint:   Palgrave Macmillan
Edition:   1st ed. 2022
Weight:   0.467kg
ISBN:  

9783031008597


ISBN 10:   3031008596
Pages:   241
Publication Date:   16 June 2022
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

1. Chapter 1 Listening to Iris Murdoch. Introduction. Music and sound in fiction: a review of the field. Music in Murdoch’s life. Discussions of music in Murdoch’s philosophy. The sound-worlds in Murdoch’s fiction. Part I – Music. 2. Chapter 2 ‘The music is too painful’: Music as character and atmosphere. Introduction. ‘Awaken, my blackbird’: Music in The unicorn. ‘Like a breathless enchanted girl’: Music in The red and the green. The swan princess: Music in The time of the angels. ‘The concourse of sweet sounds’: Music in The nice and the good. Conclusion. 3. Chapter 3 ‘The point at which flesh and spirit most joyfully meet’: Singers and singing. Introduction. ‘Che cosa e amor?’: Singing in The sea, the sea. Singing as exclusion in The message to the planet. ‘Never to sing again? Never?’: Singing in The philosopher’s pupil (1983). Conclusion. 4. Chapter 4 Musical women and unmusical men. Introduction: ‘Of course they never let the women sing.’. Quiet women: The good apprentice. Silent pianos. No women composers. Opera, intimacy, sexuality and androgyny in A fairly honourable defeat. Conclusion. Part II – Silence and sound. 5. Chapter 5 ‘Different voices, different discourses’: Voices and other human sounds. Introduction: Serious noticing. ‘The long search for words’: Something special. ‘The quiet sound of voices’: The sandcastle. ‘Intolerable with menace’: Henry and Cato. ‘A mechanical litany’: The good apprentice. Conclusion. 6. Chapter 6 ‘Like a clarity under a mist’: Ambient noise and silence, dreamscapes and atmosphere. Introduction. The sacred and profane love machine: The drama of silence. The black prince and Under the net: Silence and art. Bruno’s dream: Synaesthesia and perception. Nuns and soldiers. Conclusion. Part III – Settings. 7. Chapter 7 ‘Just bring me the composers’: Musical settings of Iris Murdoch’s words. Introduction. The servants – opera: music by William Mathias, libretto by Iris Murdoch. The round horizon, cantata in five parts: music by Christopher Bochmann, words by Iris Murdoch. The one alone: Radio play with music by Gary Carpenter. A year of birds: Song cycle for soprano and orchestra by Malcolm Williamson. Forgive me. In memoriam Iris Murdoch, 1919-1999, for unaccompanied vocal ensemble (SATB) by Paul Crabtree. Inspired by Iris: Paul Hullah and Kent Wennman. Paul Hullah, All the names under the sun and Home. Kent Wennman, A Jerusalem conversation and The thinker and the feeling one. Conclusion: Iris Murdoch set to music. Coda Sound, music, silence and listening. Part IV – The music. Appendix 1 Music mentioned in Murdoch’s fiction. Classical composers. Vocal music. Chronological list of music mentioned in Murdoch’s fiction. Appendix 2 Items in Iris Murdoch’s Oxford music collection held at Kingston University Library. Iris Murdoch’s manuscript notebooks of songs. Anthologies, collections, scores etc. Single works.

Reviews

This book is also a rare example of appendices being as fascinating and as impressive as the main text. ... Both scholarly and entertaining, it will be accessible to a general reader, although it is most likely to be of interest to those already reasonably familiar with Murdoch's fiction who will surely find they hear things in the novels which they have never heard before. (Janfarie Skinner, Iris Murdoch Review, 2022)


Author Information

Gillian Dooley is an Honorary Senior Research Fellow at Flinders University, South Australia. She has written extensively on various literary topics, often in connection with music. Her publications include From a Tiny Corner of the House of Fiction: Conversations with Iris Murdoch (2003) and other edited works on Murdoch, as well as monographs on V.S. Naipaul and J.M. Coetzee.

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