Qui chante? The Lyric’s Voice as Impersonation
- Starting from the imperative to not just read, but to speak lyric poems out loud, this paper considers ways in which poems change depending on who utters them. Beyond the familiar distinction between the poem’s author and the lyrical ‘I’ – the voice in which the poet chooses to utter the poem – any performer who speaks a poem also impersonates the text. Reading is the first act of interpretation; others follow. Sound is an indispensable constitutive aspect of the lyric poem, too often neglected. Each reading of a poem can turn into a momentary ec-stasis.
| Author: | Thomas AustenfeldORCiDGND |
|---|---|
| URN: | urn:nbn:de:hbz:385-1-26270 |
| DOI: | https://doi.org/10.25353/ubtr-izfk-ce7d-f942 |
| Parent Title (English): | Internationale Zeitschrift für Kulturkomparatistik Bd. 2 (2021): Contemporary Lyric Poetry in Transitions between Genres and Media |
| Editor: | Ralph Müller, Henrieke Stahl |
| Document Type: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Date of completion: | 2021/07/05 |
| Date of publication: | 2021/07/05 |
| Publishing institution: | Universität Trier |
| Release Date: | 2026/01/26 |
| Tag: | Diotima; lyric; performance; song; voicing |
| Number of pages: | 9 |
| First page: | 135 |
| Last page: | 143 |
| Institutes: | Fachbereich 2 |
| Licence (German): | CC BY: Creative-Commons-Lizenz 4.0 International |


