Bruno, Cosima (2017) 'Breaking Language Down: Taiwan Sound Poetry and its Ways of Saying.' Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies, 43 (2). pp. 33-56.
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Abstract
This paper explores the appearance and rapid development of a genre that crosses the boundaries between art, music, drama, and literature, and that is being variously called "sound poetry" (聲音詩 shengyin shi), "language art" (語言藝術 yuyan yishu), or "text-sound art" (文本聲音藝術 wenben shengyin yishu). I argue that Taiwan sound poetry develops as an alternative genre to Chinese poetic tradition, forging a disorienting aesthetics that is disruptive of conventional ideas of artistic quality. I conceptualize this phenomenon in its unique history and politics, extrapolating some key features that include: a poetics that strives not for semantic extension or enrichment, but that radically aims at "semantic abjection"; intervention in Taiwan language politics and translingual context, through its contribution to a "culture of the ear"; a shift of attention from textual semantics to performance with audience/users' participation; strategic denial of a genealogy rooted in the Chinese tradition, with sound poets' pronouncements about their poetics as being an entirely Western import; double nature as local, Sinophone, and global.
Item Type: | Journal Article |
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SOAS Departments & Centres: | Departments and Subunits > Department of East Asian Languages & Cultures Legacy Departments > Faculty of Languages and Cultures > Department of the Languages and Cultures of China and Inner Asia |
ISSN: | 17298792 |
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): | https://doi.org/10.6240/concentric.lit.2017.43.2.03 |
Date Deposited: | 13 Jul 2017 08:29 |
URI: | https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/id/eprint/24330 |
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