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Index
REMEMBERING AND THE SOUND OF WORDS
Remembering and the Sound of Words
Mallarmé, Proust, Joyce, Beckett
Acknowledgements
Contents
Introduction
Reduplication of Sweet Sounds
The Meaning of Individual Phonemes
Mimetic Phonemes and Kristeva's Babies
Alerting-Devices
Musical Remembering
Fetishistic Moods and Key Words
Over-Sounds and Symptomatic Rhyming
Stress-Lines and Masson Patterns
Mallarmé and Poetic Prose: Le Démon et les rimes dissimulés
Derrida's Disseminating Rhymes
Baudelaire and the Prose Poem
Mallarmé's Prose-Rhyme Penultimate
T. E. F. L. and Alliteration
2 Re-establishing Contacts: prose rhymes in A la Recherche du temps perdu
Self-Appeasement, Mourning, and Poetic Prose
Prose Facsimiles and Musical Acts of Remembering
Wagnerian Leitmotif
Allusion and 'Phrases Types'
3 Significant Lapses of Speech: rhymes and reasons in Joyce's prose
The Myth of Joyce's Memory
Personal and Race Memory
Slips of the Tongue
Evacuated Auditory Imagination
Significant Lapses and Mocking Mirrors
RHYMES AND REASONS
Remembering and Half-Conscious Evasions
The Secrets of Auditory Memory
Beckett on Joyce and Proust
Parody and Textual Memory
Siren Sounds
Sensual Private Memory
Rhyming Noise
4 Beckett's Prose Rhymes: remembering, companionability, self-accompaniment
Semantic Amnesia and Fictional Remembering
Memory Traces and the Forgetful Textual Voice
Rhyming Two Languages
Encounters of Memory, Voice, Body
Rhymes Lyrical, Rhymes Authorial
Narrative Voice and the Shadow of Memory
Conclusion
Appendix 1 Sound-Frequency Percentages 'It is not to be Thought of'
Appendix 2: French Sound-Frequency Percentages
Bibliography:
INTRODUCTION
MALLARMÉ
PROUST
PRIMARY TEXTS
SECONDARY TEXTS
JOYCE
PRIMARY TEXTS
SECONDARY TEXTS
BECKETT
PRIMARY TEXTS IN ENGLISH.
PRIMARY TEXTS IN FRENCH.
SECONDARY TEXTS.
Index
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