Poetry and Music: Wallace Stevens’s Sound-scape in The Man with the Blue GuitarPoetry and Music: Wallace Stevens’s Sound-scape in The Man with the Blue Guitar
- Other Titles
- Poetry and Music: Wallace Stevens’s Sound-scape in The Man with the Blue Guitar
- Authors
- 한지희
- Issue Date
- 2019
- Publisher
- 한국비교문학회
- Keywords
- Stevens; Sound-scape; Ocular-centrism; The Book of Tea; the Artless Art; 스티븐스; 음경; 시각중심주의; 다도; 무기교의 기교
- Citation
- 비교문학, no.77, pp.249 - 276
- Indexed
- KCI
- Journal Title
- 비교문학
- Number
- 77
- Start Page
- 249
- End Page
- 276
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/gnu/handle/sw.gnu/10540
- DOI
- 10.21720/complit77.09
- ISSN
- 1225-0910
- Abstract
- Although Wallace Stevens presents very intriguing sound events in many of his poems, scholars have focused more on his ocular-centric metaphorics than his sound-scape and its symbolism. Thus, this paper makes an attempt to examine the sound-marks in “The Man with the Blue Guitar” within the Eastern metaphysical frame of ‘Mu-wuy-Ja-Yeon’ (無爲自然). In particular, drawing on the influence of Okakura Kakuzo’s The Book of Tea on Stevens’s cosmopolitan sensibility, it takes a close look at Taoist and Zen-Buddhist notions of becoming, relativity, artless art and makes a parallel between a Taoist artist Peiwoh and the musician-poet in The Man with the Blue Guitar. Then it tries to explicate how Stevens adapts the sound-marks of Eastern metaphysics and aesthetics in his modernist experimentation to summon up something that is not quite expressible in the ocular-centric metaphorics. Ultimately, this paper aims to suggest an alternative approach to appreciate the Eastern sound-marks as part of the modern song of America Stevens played with his blue guitar.
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