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Issue Details: First known date: 2020... 2020 “The Origins of Speech Lie in Song” : Music as Language in Coetzee’s Age of Iron
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'In Disgrace, David Lurie finds preposterous the proposition that “Human society has created language in order that we may communicate our thoughts, feelings and intentions to each other”, privately believing that, on the contrary, “the origins of speech lie in song” (Coetzee 2000: 3-4). In my 2010 book J. M. Coetzee and the Power of Narrative, I included a brief survey of references to music as a type of language in Coetzee’s work. In this paper I will examine my claim in greater depth, seeking musical resonances in his novel Age of Iron, both in his prose and in the form and structure of the novel. I will attempt to account for my impression that despite his reputation for spare, academic prose, Coetzee is a lyrical and impassioned writer, and that musical rhythms and structures are an essential element in his work.' (Publication abstract)

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  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Le Simplegadi Always Connect : Transdisciplinarity and Intercultural Contact in Literary Discourse no. 20 2020 23649252 2020 periodical issue 2020 pg. 26-34
Last amended 6 Jan 2022 10:20:29
26-34 “The Origins of Speech Lie in Song” : Music as Language in Coetzee’s Age of Ironsmall AustLit logo Le Simplegadi
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