抒情诗空间中的虚拟聆听:中世纪晚期英语抒情诗中的第一人称声音效果

Melissa S. Tu
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摘要

摘要:本文探讨了中世纪晚期英语祈祷歌词中的一种感官刺激形式,这里称为文本感知,特别关注围绕第一人称代词I的指示性歧义。借鉴虚拟研究的概念,并以14世纪和15世纪的宗教歌词为例,我认为这些歌词使用第一人称声音激活了听众的身体本能。从而产生肉体声音识别的感觉。这些对感官知觉的呼吁并不是简单地将物理感知作为一种概念行为;它们还能惊人地模拟感官体验。此外,第一人称的声音效果存在于文本的语言和句法安排中,因此不管诗歌在什么情况下出现,它都在起作用:无论是在书页上还是在歌唱中;大声朗读或默读;与人相处或独处。我认为中古英语的祈祷歌词可以理解为一种虚拟环境的形式,让他们的听众体验到由虚拟身体产生的肉体对象的诗意人物角色的想象声音。通过探索中古英语抒情诗的主体I如何催化文本声音的生动感官体验,本文扩展了我们对语言媒介形式如何想象和超越文本身体的理解。
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Virtual Listening in Lyric Space: First-Person Voice Effects in Late Medieval English Lyric
Abstract:This article explores a form of sensory stimulation in late medieval English devotional lyric, referred to here as textual sensing, with a specific focus on deictic ambiguities surrounding the first-person pronoun I. Drawing on concepts from virtuality studies, and focusing on examples of religious lyrics from the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, I argue that these lyrics' uses of first-person voice activate their audiences' bodily instincts, thereby generating sensations of recognizing voices in the flesh. These appeals to sensory perception do not simply represent physical sensing as a conceptual act; they also strikingly simulate sensory experience. Furthermore, the first-person voice effects inhere in the texts' verbal and syntactic arrangements and are therefore at work regardless of the circumstances under which the poems are encountered: whether on the page or sung; read aloud or in silence; in company or in solitude. I argue that Middle English devotional lyrics can be understood as a form of virtual environment, allowing their audiences to experience the imagined voices of poetic personas as somatic objects generated by virtual bodies. By exploring how the subject I in Middle English lyric can catalyze vivid sensory experiences of textual voices, this article expands our understanding of the ways in which verbal media forms can imagine—and transcend—textual bodies.
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