6/4/2023 0 Comments The pianist elfriede jelinek![]() ![]() ![]() Thus, the novel not only points out its criticism on how music has been instrumentalized, but the narrative plot also gains the performative ability to actually do what usually is said about music. In the text, her actions in the diegesis reveal a performative connection to what is discussed in literary discourse. These metaphors relate performance of music to the protagonist’s deviant sexual behavior.Įrika Kohut’s disturbed sexuality thus reveals something more than a perverted individual. The novel’s protagonist, Erika Kohut, is a pianist and piano teacher and many intermedial references to music highlight the bodily strain to produce music by means of violent metaphors. ![]() The article explores the way how intermedial references to musical performance in the diegesis interact with the self-referential performativity of Jelinek’s prose. These questions are highly relevant when discussing Elfriede Jelinek’s The Piano Teacher ( Die Klavierspielerin, 1983). Referring to the performer in the narrative draws attention to how the narrating text itself performs, stages, and presents. It will be argued that narrated performance is a means to highlight aspects of language that are dependent on bodily presence. This article deals with the question of how literary narration may be enriched or challenged by referring to musical performance in the plot. 85-99 Article in journal (Refereed) Published Abstract 2016 (English) In: Danish Musicology Online, E-ISSN 1904-237X, p. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |