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Literature and Musical Adaptation
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It can safely be said that when literary texts are utilized or adapted by a musician to create a new work of art, it is seldom that a diminished or lessened product results. Rather, such a merging ...
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01 January 2002

It can safely be said that when literary texts are utilized or adapted by a musician to create a new work of art, it is seldom that a diminished or lessened product results. Rather, such a merging usually enlarges and enhances both text and tune, perhaps significantly changing the message of the original. Discovering exactly what the new form has to offer and how it relates to the text or melody that preceded it is often a daunting task, requiring a close examination of both the author’s and the composer’s intent.
The essays in this collection offer an analysis of several adaptations, some successful, some not so successful, and attempt to assess just what the musicians or writers have modified or changed from to the original as they re-form it into an altogether different media. Ranging from Pasternak’s appropriation of Tchaikovsky to Britten’s operatic versions of Billy Budd and the Turn of the Screw, from Celan’s use of fugal technique in his “Todesfuge” to the way that the musicianship of several women writers found voice in their writing, a broad spectrum of collaborations is examined. As readers examine an author’s respect for a long dead musician (Hopkins’ admiration of Purcell) or as they discover how John Harbison worked to transform Fitzgerald’s musicality in The Great Gatsby, it will be evident that musical adaptations often provide a richness that the originals did not possess and that the potential for greatness is heightened when the arts intersect.
The essays in this collection offer an analysis of several adaptations, some successful, some not so successful, and attempt to assess just what the musicians or writers have modified or changed from to the original as they re-form it into an altogether different media. Ranging from Pasternak’s appropriation of Tchaikovsky to Britten’s operatic versions of Billy Budd and the Turn of the Screw, from Celan’s use of fugal technique in his “Todesfuge” to the way that the musicianship of several women writers found voice in their writing, a broad spectrum of collaborations is examined. As readers examine an author’s respect for a long dead musician (Hopkins’ admiration of Purcell) or as they discover how John Harbison worked to transform Fitzgerald’s musicality in The Great Gatsby, it will be evident that musical adaptations often provide a richness that the originals did not possess and that the potential for greatness is heightened when the arts intersect.
Price: $56.00
Pages: 222
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Rodopi Perspectives on Modern Literature
Publication Date:
01 January 2002
ISBN: 9789042008021
Format: Paperback
Michael J. Meyer is Adjunct Professor of English at DePaul and Northeastern Illinois Universities in Chicago. He is the new Steinbeck bibliographer, and his essays on Steinbeck have appeared in numerous books and journals. His most recent Steinbeck scholarship is Cain Sign: The Betrayal of Brotherhood in the Work of John Steinbeck (Mellen 2000). Meyer has also edited three other books for Rodopi Press’s series entitled Perspectives in Modern Literature including Literature and Ethnic Discrimination, Literature and Homosexuality and Literature and the Grotesque. He is presently working as co-editor of the new Steinbeck Encyclopaedia (Greenwood, forthcoming).