Staccato czy asyndeton? Kilka uwag o „umuzycznionej” prozie powieściowej (na marginesie Syren Joyce’a)
Streszczenie
Word and music studies, which in recent years have been gaining more and more attention,
still remain a source of a never-ending discussion on ‘the method’ and ‘the manner
of speaking’ about the manifestations of a work of music, which, put within the frames
of a literary medium, exist only in the rhetorical sense, thus leading to an individual and
subjective interpretation of a musical scheme. Sirens, the eleventh episode of James
Joyce’s Ulysses, which was not so far analysed in the intermedial context in Poland, invites
to a musico-literary reading — not only due to the author’s explicit hints but also
the tracks in the text itself which cannot be ignored by a scholar (the sound level of the
text, the presence of music within the thematic scheme, the author’s confirmation of the
fugitive form of Sirens). Instead of asking whether Joyce managed to create a literary
equivalent of musical fugue (which would be absurd due to the semiologic aspect),
I focus on tropes employed by Joyce to blur the borderlines between literature and music.
When is it justified to use musical metaphors with respect to narratives? An overview
of the western discussion over Sirens serves as a point of departure to reflect on
essential issues concerning the musicalisation of fiction as such.