Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Orchestrating Modernity: Musical Culture and the Arts of Noise
2. Beating Obedient, Thinking of the Key: Adorno, The Waste Land, and the Total Work of Art
3. The Antheil Era: Ezra Pound's MusicalSensations
4. Joyce's Phoneygraphs
5. Performing Publicity: Authenticity, Influence, andthe Sitwellian Commedia
6. Aristocracy of the Dissonant: The Sublime Noise of Forster and Britten
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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Description
""Josh Epstein's Sublime Noise: Musical Culture and the Modernist Writer is exhilarating reading... Epstein quotes Theodor Adorno's dictum, ""What crackles in artworks is the sound of the friction of the antagonistic elements that the artwork seeks to unify,"" and one appreciates a similar crackling in Epstein's book, not that of antagonistic elements frustrating critical attempts at unification but rather that of a critic's rigorous and sympathetic attention to the ungovernable (indeed, the sublime) operations of noise in modernism's literary aesthetic.""