Landscapes of Liminality
eBook - ePub

Landscapes of Liminality

Between Space and Place

  1. 254 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Landscapes of Liminality

Between Space and Place

About this book

Landscapes of Liminality expands upon existing notions of spatial practice and spatial theory, and examines more intricately the contingent notion of "liminality" as a space of "in-between-ness" that avoids either essentialism or stasis. It capitalises on the extensive research that has already been undertaken in this area, and elaborates on the increasingly important and interrelated notion of liminality within contemporary discussions of spatial practice and theories of place. Bringing together international scholarship, the book offers a broad range of cross-disciplinary approaches to theories of liminality including literary studies, cultural studies, human geography, social studies, and art and design. The volume offers a timely and fascinating intervention which will help in shaping current debates concerning landscape theory, spatial practice, and discussions of liminality.

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Yes, you can access Landscapes of Liminality by Dara Downey,Ian Kinane,Elizabeth Parker, Dara Downey, Ian Kinane, Elizabeth Parker in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Literary Criticism Theory. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Section I
Liminal Spaces and Places
Chapter 1
Close Listening
Urban Soundscapes in Ulysses, Manhattan Transfer, and Berlin Alexanderplatz
Annika Eisenberg
Sound is a sensory experience and the human ear is the designated detector of sounds. The question arises, therefore, as to whether this implies that only media appealing specifically to this organ can incorporate and communicate sound. In this chapter, I argue that sound occurs very prominently in literature—and not just as an elaborate metaphor or atmospheric background description, but as sound in the way Melba Cuddy-Keane suggests: “[By] reading for sonics rather than semantics, for precepts rather than concepts, we discover new ways of making narrative sense”.1 In following this argument, I contribute to the growing field of Literary Sound Studies as a specialised area within the widely interdisciplinary field of Sound Studies, a field which still “lack[s] a language adequate to the discussion of sound—a language that addresses sound as sound and not as something else”.2 In a similar manner to Sylvia Mieszkowski’s Resonant Alterities (2014), this chapter will “build a bridge between the interdisciplinary field of Sound Studies and literary criticism”.3 In doing so, I regard sound in literature as a liminal phenomenon, and it will be seen not only that the notion of liminality is productive as a concept for the analysis of sound in literature, but that sound itself is staged as a liminal phenomenon in texts. I first outline possible ways of looking at literature’s particular means for “staging” sound—a term borrowed from Karin Bijsterveld4—by conceptualising and contextualising ideas of mimesis, representation, and other approaches to the incorporation of sensory experiences in literature in order to arrive at liminality as a heuristic concept for literary sound studies. Then, I put this into practice by punctuating the urban soundscapes5 of three of the most seminal city novels of the early twentieth century: James Joyce’s Ulysses6 (1922), which centres on one day in Dublin (16 June 1904) and the activities and thoughts of Leopold Bloom as a parallel to Homer’s Odyssey (eighth century BC); John Dos Passos’s Manhattan Transfer7 (1925), which tells the stories of six main characters as they struggle to cope with life in New York City shortly before, during, and after World War I; and Alfred Döblin’s Berlin Alexanderplatz8 (1929), which is about the dim-witted and gullible ex-convict Franz Biberkopf, who vows to be respectable, but finally surrenders to the temptations of bustling Berlin. I have chosen two aspects that, to my mind, lend themselves to a fruitful investigation of urban soundscapes in literature and illustrate the analytical implications of liminality: onomatopoeia and literary dialect, which I will address in the final sections of this chapter.9
Sensory Experiences in Literature
Urban sound in literature might at first seem far from a marginal phenomenon, especially since the city and its sensory experience has become a focal point in many modern and postmodern novels. But there is considerable dissent among scholars whether literature actually contains sensory material—and thus sound. Elaine Scarry, for instance, proposes a threefold typology of how sensory experiences are incorporated and staged in different media: immediate, delayed, and mimetic sensory content.10 The first—immediate sensory content—tends to be experienced in music, painting, sculpture, theatre, and film, since all of these appeal to the actual senses of hearing, sight, smell, or touch. The second—delayed sensory content—gives “instructions for the production of actual sensory content”.11 To elucidate this, Scarry uses the example of a musical score that produces actual aural content only when interpreted on a musical instrument. To Scarry, verbal arts occupy the realm of the third of these categories—“perceptual mimesis”—which means that they feature “no actual sensory content, whether immediate or delayed; there is instead only mimetic content, the figural rooms and faces and weather that we mimetically see, touch, and hear, though in no case do we actually do so”.12
Despite this typology being frequently put to use, I do not find Scarry’s distinction between delayed and mimetic sensory content convincing.13 Certainly, musical scores (delayed sensory content) follow different rules and conventions than literary language (mimetic sensory content) when it comes to the transcription of sounds. But do they really require two separate and distinct categories? If one tries to find other examples analogous to musical notation and the actual musical piece, one might arrive at the relationships between a screenplay and the actual film, or a script of a theatre play and its actual performance. But what if, say, the theatre script never gets produced or is even never intended to be performed, as is the case with closet dramas?14 And, taken even further, what about the prolific readers of musical scores who can hear the actual musical piece by reading the notation?15 So rather than trying to essentialise the respective art forms and media, rather than trying to decide from the outset if something mediated by paintings, musical notation, or poetry can or cannot be actually heard, seen, tasted, smelt, or felt, I would like to argue for a more dynamic and flexible model to describe sensory content in literature (and other arts) that takes into account an intersubjective perspective and the many grey areas and marginal spaces that interart and intermedia relations create for the sensory apparatus. I propose the notion of liminality to serve as such a model. The definition of liminality that I use is taken originally from the studies of rituals by anthropologists Arnold van Gennep16 and Victor Turner.17 “Liminality” describes a state or location that is transitional, subjective, ambivalent, unstable, and marginal and that opens up new possibilities in a binary system; liminal phenomena occupy “middle-way” positions between two states or locations by being—paradoxically—neither or both of them at the same time. This highly abstract and fluid concept is actually very helpful in bringing together sound studies and literary criticism in the field of literary sound studies.
Scarry admits that the harsh generalisation that all verbal arts have only mimetic sensory content should be qualified with regard to visual poetry and the performance of poems, since “like the musical score, its [the poem’s] sequence of printed signs contains a set of instructions for the production of actual sound; the page does not itself sing, but exists forever on the verge of song”.18 Her choice of words is already indicative of liminal characteristics, since it is both the visual/printed and the acoustic/performed qualities that make a poem, so that it occupies a state between sight and sound, a space between both modes of reception. Scarry’s observation gives a compelling account for poetry as a liminal art form of visual and acoustic features, which I would like to extend to other verbal arts that I consider, too, to be equally “on the verge” of stimulating other senses. All of these observations lead away from an attempt to distil an essence of sensory content in media and towards an intersubjective mode of reception. Indeed, it is much more productive to argue for the recipient’s involvement not only in hearing but also in co-creating the acoustic qualities of a work, and thus to come at this through reader-response criticism for analysis. This renders the artificial separation of notational systems—whether for music or language or something else—unnecessary. Such a shift in perspective from an art-centred to a recipient-centred approach can be found in Yael Balaban’s concept of double mimesis in literature: “For a double mimesis to occur, the sensory experience must be translated into words and passed on to another person, namely the reader”.19 The reader, in turn, engages through the author’s description in the mental and maybe even the physical recreation of that experience. Balaban claims that “not only the creation of a work of art, but also its reception is a mimetic act”.20 While Balaban focuses perhaps too much on an alleged authority of the author, her approach is much more productive for examining sensory content in literature because of its emphasis on a subjective reading experience without restricting sensory experiences to the realm of the imagination: “Though we may not react in a direct physical way, we are still subject to physical sensations stimulated by certain descriptions”.21
Although both Scarry and Balaban place the complex concept of mimesis at the centre of their argumentation, this difficult term may actually hinder a heuristic discussion of sensory experiences of and in literature. Even though Matthew Potolsky clarifies that “even in its earliest uses, mimesis never simply meant imitation” but “described many forms of similarity or equivalence”, mimesis still carries a close association with forms of “realist” or “realist...

Table of contents

  1. Cover-Page
  2. Half Title
  3. Introduction: Locating Liminality: Space, Place, and the In-Between
  4. Section I: Liminal Spaces and Places
  5. Section II: Liminal Identities
  6. Index
  7. Notes on Contributors