When in the 1930s Mikhail Bakhtin theorized the stylistic uniqueness of the novel, he declared, “[the] human being in the novel is first, foremost and always a speaking human being” (332). On the other side of media studies, Bakhtin's modernist insight into polyphony strikes contemporary readers as being premised on the separability of a voice from a speaker and its travel in time and space. It is a phonographic, if not also radiophonic insight, Bakhtin writing against a new backdrop of sound technology. But where the phonograph has tended to garner more scholarly attention—“literary studies has a gramophone problem,” writes Paul Saint-Amour (15)—the radio has been understudied, in part because the novel appears to be a less natural companion to the genre. Nevertheless, the acousmatic bodies of radio have been the novel's constant companion, in both fact and imagination. One thinks of Joseph Conrad's Marlow, who...
Worlds of Sound
JULIE BETH NAPOLIN is an associate professor of digital humanities at the New School. Her monograph, The Fact of Resonance: Modernist Acoustics and Narrative Form, was published in 2020 by Fordham University Press and shortlisted for the 2021 Memory Studies Association First Book Award. She has published a number of essays on sound, literature, media, and race in such venues as Vibratory Modernism, Sounding Modernism, Faulkner and Slavery, Symploke, qui parle, and Sounding Out! The Sound Studies Blog. Her essays on Joseph Conrad and sound were awarded the Bruce Harkness Prize and the J. H. Stape Conradiana Prize. Napolin is the co-president of the William Faulkner Society and a member of the editorial board of Sound Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal. She is currently working on an oral history of Henry Street Settlement in the time of COVID-19.
Julie Beth Napolin; Worlds of Sound. Novel 1 May 2022; 55 (1): 140–145. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/00295132-9615082
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