Tone
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Tone is a collaborative study of literary tone, a notoriously challenging and slippery topic for criticism. Both granular and global, infusing a text with feeling, tone is so difficult to pin down that responses to it often take the vague form of “I know it when I see it.”
In Tone, a cooperative authorial voice under the name of the Committee to Investigate Atmosphere begins from the premise that tone is relational, belonging to shared experience rather than a single author, and should be approached through a communal practice. In partnership, the Committee explores the atmospheres emanating from texts by Nella Larsen, W. G. Sebald, Heike Geissler, Hiroko Oyamada, Mieko Kanai, Bhanu Kapil, Franz Kafka, Renee Gladman, and others, attending to the chafing of political irritation, the hunger of precarious and temporary work, and the lonely delights of urban and suburban walks.
This study treats a variety of questions: How is tone filtered through translation? Can a text hold the feelings that pass between humans and animals? What can attention to literary tone reveal about shared spaces such as factories, universities, and streets and the clashes and connections that happen there? Searching and conversational, Tone seeks immersion in literary affect to convey the experience of reading—and living—together.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"What is tone?" ask novelists Samatar (The White Mosque) and Zambreno (The Light Room) in this dull meditation. They offer up vague observations about J.M. Coetzee's Elizabeth Costello, Heike Geissler's Seasonal Associate, and Franz Kafka's short stories, but conclusions remain elusive. For instance, Samatar and Zambreno examine how in Nella Larsen's novel Quicksand, the omniscient narrator and other characters perceive protagonist Helga Crane as aloof when she actually feels herself to be "horribly lonely and lost." The authors argue that "this narrative gaze, porous and at tension between deep feeling and consciousness and physical exterior," constitutes "something of tone," though they don't elaborate why. The meaning of tone becomes even less clear as the volume proceeds, with the authors suggesting at various points that tone is "a room that we inhabit and are inhabited by," "the absent presence," and "a window one looks out of and also a window one looks into." The authors' acknowledgment that they "do not possess anything like a conclusive statement about these matters" frustrates, and a recurrent thread attempting to elucidate a connection between tone's interdependent nature ("What creates the vibe of a room? The other people inside it") and collective narrative voice (the authors use first-person plural throughout, writing that this volume "began as a desire for the collective. For the us that is us and beyond us") remains out of focus. This perplexes.