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"Soundings of Things Done": The Poetry and Poetics of Sound in the Romantic Ear and EraPhonemanography: Romantic to VictorianGarrett Stewart, University of Iowa |
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Notes1 By contrast, and to anticipate
something closer to the turn of Agamben's thought perhaps, the generalized
apostrophe "Beware of the dog"—as speech act rather than
common noun in clausal context—absents the animal's presence (regardless
of its visibility at the moment) but under precisely the sign of its potential (as
threat). The imperative is to "be" in a state of expectation,
in the form of wariness.
2 See Brandreth, where the
phenomenon is placed under the sign of the quizzical in the subheading "What
Did You Say?" (58-59). Brandreth's obscure and unexplained coinage
(alluding to an either/or ambiguity, perhaps, rather than to the technical
term "oronymy" for the onomastic class "names of mountains"),
a term which has nonetheless had considerable circulation since, is defined
as follows: "Oronyms are sentences that can be read in two ways
with the same sound"—as in the rather self-exampling 'Are
you aware of the words you have just uttered' vs. '. . . just stuttered.'
Or more fully discrepant: 'The stuffy nose can lead to problems / The
stuff he knows can lead to problems." All of his examples, however,
turn in this way on the junctural equivocation of two (or three) abutting
words, so that such phrasal alternatives (rather than full-sentence variants)
are predominantly dependent on what I have called the wavering phonemic
juncture of a "transegmental drift." See Stewart passim.
3 Both for her spirited
send-off to our panel when it was composed of talks rather than articles
(where, even then, I was borrowing formulations off the cuff as fast
as I could remember them or jot them down), and for her brilliant advice
since in overseeing the expansion of my paper into an actual essay, I
compound my longstanding debt to the private as well as printed wisdom
of Susan Wolfson.
4 "Between
Shakespeare and Joyce," writes William H. Gass in an essay called "The
Sentence Seeks its Form," "there is no one but Dickens who
has an equal command of the English language" (275)—and
he means by this to stress the aural dimension of the novelist's effects. "Language
is born in the lungs and is shaped by the lips, palate, teeth, and
tongue out of spent breath. . . . It therefore must be listened to
while it is being written" (273). Written—and then read,
its origins thus recovered in its destination. There is nothing undeconstructed
in this. As Dolar would agree, and before him Agamben, and of course
Kittler too, speech is not the work of spirit but strictly enunciation, "spent
breath" and its articulated blockages. In Dickens, long before
he reaches the podium with it, such printed language waits to be audited,
precisely by being silently released from, typography's pent breath.
Gass's most striking evidence from Dickens is a sentence that carries
a slight additional interest for the present essay, rather than for
his, in the way it is sustained upon the nonapostrophic and recursive
lower-case moan of o. David Copperfield's lament is given here
with my further typographical highlights on the kinds of anaphoric
returns and alphabetic reversals by which Gass is intrigued: "From
Monday morning until Saturday night, I had no advice, no counsel, no encouragement, no consolation,
no assistance, no support, of any kind, from any one. .
. ." (275). Gass's own stress falls not on the negative trailing
off of the non-echoic "one" (with its slant reprise of the
opening "Monday") but rather, before that syllabic
denouement, on the overt graphic flips from "no" to "on" and
the alphabetic and half phonic return of the latter twice over, after
the aggrieved "no counsel," in the impacted nugatory parallel
of "no consolation."
5 Quoted in Jameson,
where the lines are treated for their lyric reification of the sea
voyage, but without attention to the phonetic wavelets that serves
to swamp the turmoil of below-deck labor—or at least float euphonically
above it.
6 See other examples
in The Mill on the Floss in Reading Voices (above n.
2), 212.
7 This is a relationality
of subordinate phrasing on which no one writes more grippingly than
Christopher Ricks. See "William Wordsworth (2): 'A Sinking Inward
into Ourselves from Thought to Thought.'"
8 The way this
redirected expectation—from "being someone," or "being
something or other" (as, say, "intuitive" or "munificent")
to simply the named fact of her existence as a force for change—the
way this might, in Eliot's manner of putting it, "vibrate to" the
being present of potentiality itself in Agamben's writings (the existence
of nonexistence as a positive rather than a negative force) anticipates
the remaining direction of the essay.
9 See also the
separate treatment of the mediations in Kittler, Gramophone, Film,
Typewriter.
10 See Jean-Claude
Milner, Introduction à une science du langage.
11 The point
is not an easy one—this relation of thought to non-voice: "We
can only think if language is not our voice, only if we reach our own
aphonia at its very bottom (but in reality there is no bottom). What
we call the world is this abyss" (Agamben, Language and Death 108).
Cognition is distance. Among the several reiterations of this central
Heidegerrian inference, here in Agamben's own italics: "Thinking
death is simply thinking the Voice. Turning radically back, in
death, from its having been thrown into Da, Dasein's negative
retrieves its own aphonia" (60). It is not just, after Hegel,
that things come to consciousness only by being the negation of what
they are not. Further, the consciousness to which they come is the
negation of exactly that voice which is negated in their naming. For
this philosophical tradition derived from Hegel, the only way, in any
sense, to be "positive" about the world is through such double
negations. Agamben's self-appointed task, always by definition provisional,
is to forge another route.
12 The world
emerges from the infinite regress of speech (or thought) tracking down "its" voice
to the impossible "there" of its being. To think the condition
of being that is indexed, rather than ever truly uttered, by voice
requires a medium other than that voice. But if the realized world
is defined in this way as the sheer negation of voice, as all that
remains outside that voice, signified by the very language that cancels
its sound in the enounced sense of other things, then the recognized
distance of thought from voice is an essential ethical as well as a
philosophical idea: route of the only proper descent from self-enclosed logos into
the groundless but no less immanent reality of ethos, where
one must share a non-individuated space with others.
13 Certainly,
in this closing high note of Agamben's, one can hear overtones of a
pervasive Deleuzian intuition—most obvious or clear-cut, perhaps,
in the latter's engagement (so different from Kittler's Lacanian application)
with the "imaginary" of film: namely, that the virtual, as
part of the real, may be the opposite of the actual, but not its negation.
See Deleuze 7.
14 Percy Bysshe
Shelley, "A Defence of Poetry," in Wolfson and Manning 874.
15 In "Being
Odd, Getting Even (Descartes, Emerson, Poe)," Stanley Cavell sees
(hears) Poe's prose as "a parody's of philosophy's" (111)
in just this respect, its iterative paranoia and "impish" wordplay
as the mad antithesis of any overcome skepticism about the credited
and signified world. In Poe's story "The Imp of the Perverse," on
which Cavell focuses, the stray phoneme "imp" breaks into
discourse as invasive prefix as if it manifests the return of a linguistic
repressed that must be patrolled by a normative everyday discourse.
Recall in this disruptive sense the rising visionary stress of a phrase
like Shelley's from Ode to the West Wind: his triple impish
pun on fused subjectivity released from the monosyllabic trigger of "imp-et/you/us/one." |