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Rewriting Clara Schumann: Intertextuality and Intermediality in Janice Galloway's Clara

Englisch · Taschenbuch

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Diploma Thesis from the year 2004 in the subject English Language and Literature Studies - Literature, grade: 1,0, University of Vienna (Geistes- und Kulturwissenschaftliche Fakultät), language: English, abstract: Inhaltsangabe:Introduction:
When I spent a year in Edinburgh as an exchange student, I was introduced to the novels of Janice Galloway in a seminar on contemporary Scottish women writers. I was immediately impressed by her unique, original approach to writing fiction and, being a student of literature as well as a musician, I knew I had found the perfect topic for my thesis when I learned about the subject of her next novel, which was to be published in the following summer, a literary biography of Clara Wieck Schumann.
Clara Wieck Schumann was one of the leading concert pianists of the nineteenth century. Born in 1819 in Leipzig, she received her musical training from her father, Friedrich Wieck. At an early age she began her successful concert tours through Europe, and soon she equalled the likes of Liszt or Chopin in terms of masterly performance and fame. When she married Robert Schumann in 1840, he was still an obscure composer while Clara was already a word-famous virtuosa. Unfortunately, she had no means of recording her playing in those days, and since she was not equally prolific as a composer, her name has become widely unknown today. Thus, Clara Wieck Schumann has been granted a five-page entry in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2nd ed.), while the entry on Robert Schumann stretches over 57 pages in the same work. During the last few decades, however, a scholarly interest in Clara Wieck Schumann has awoken, which has resulted in a number of publications on her life and work. Among them there are also some novels, or literary biographies , each of which draws a very personalised, subjective portrait of the pianist.
One of the most recent literary accounts of Clara Schumann s life is Clara, the latest novel by Janice Galloway. Before turning to Clara Schumann as a subject for her next project, Galloway produced a number of works, including two novels (The Trick is to Keep Breathing and Foreign Parts) and two collections of short stories (Blood and Where You Find It). She also won an impressive number of prizes and awards for her writings. For her original literary biography of Clara Wieck Schumann she received the Saltire Society Scottish Book of the Year Award in 2002.
In writing Clara, Galloway has of course drawn heavily on historical source texts such as letters or diary entries, as well as on biographies of Clara Schumann and on fictional texts, which is why her novel can be called a rewriting of Clara s life. This study is not only concerned with intertextuality in Galloway s work, but also with the way the medium of music has had a bearing on the rewriting of her heroine s life. Music is integrated in the novel in various ways, and the second part of my paper will therefore deal with intermediality in Clara. That intertextuality and intermediality are related phenomena stands to reason: in both cases a text, which is our point of departure here, reaches out to other domains to constitute itself.
An intertextual work draws on different texts to piece together its meaning, while an intermedial novel somehow stands between two media. Intertextuality and intermediality can therefore both be subsumed under what we may call medial relations , for want of a better term. This study follows Wolf s definition of medium as a conventionally distinct means of communication, specified not only by particular channels (or one channel) of communication but also by the use of one or more semiotic systems serving for the transmission of cultural messages .
Intertextuality can then be classified as a sub-form of intra-medial relations, since only one medium is involved, while the term intermediality denotes relations ...

Produktdetails

Autoren Julia Novak
Verlag Grin Verlag
 
Sprache Englisch
Produktform Taschenbuch
Erschienen 21.01.2014
 
EAN 9783838689746
ISBN 978-3-8386-8974-6
Seiten 120
Abmessung 148 mm x 210 mm x 8 mm
Gewicht 184 g
Thema Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik > Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaft > Englische Sprachwissenschaft / Literaturwissenschaft

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