L’horreur acoustique musiques « anempathiques » dans le théâtre de Martin Crimp

The British playwright Martin Crimp suggests an ironic use of music and sounds in his stage directions. Antiphrasis is thus transposed from a textual semiotic system to an auditory semiotic system. Music is not illustrative but arouses on the contrary an “anempathetic” effect, an expression coined b...

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Main Author: Aloysia Rousseau
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte" 2003-06-01
Series:Sillages Critiques
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/2955
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author Aloysia Rousseau
author_facet Aloysia Rousseau
author_sort Aloysia Rousseau
collection DOAJ
description The British playwright Martin Crimp suggests an ironic use of music and sounds in his stage directions. Antiphrasis is thus transposed from a textual semiotic system to an auditory semiotic system. Music is not illustrative but arouses on the contrary an “anempathetic” effect, an expression coined by Michel Chion in his book La Musique au cinéma. Martin Crimp exploits this anempathetic strategy in plays such as Play with Repeats (1990), The Treatment (1993) or more recently the triptych Fewer Emergencies (2005) in which violent events are narrated with a boogie-woogie playing in the background. The horror of the story is emphasized by the musical counterpoint. The joy which pervades the stage through the use of music is denounced as artificial.
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language English
publishDate 2003-06-01
publisher Centre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte"
record_format Article
series Sillages Critiques
spelling doaj-art-81be32860d3d45ae8b81c465e56ae7ce2025-01-30T13:46:48ZengCentre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte"Sillages Critiques1272-38191969-63022003-06-011610.4000/sillagescritiques.2955L’horreur acoustique musiques « anempathiques » dans le théâtre de Martin CrimpAloysia RousseauThe British playwright Martin Crimp suggests an ironic use of music and sounds in his stage directions. Antiphrasis is thus transposed from a textual semiotic system to an auditory semiotic system. Music is not illustrative but arouses on the contrary an “anempathetic” effect, an expression coined by Michel Chion in his book La Musique au cinéma. Martin Crimp exploits this anempathetic strategy in plays such as Play with Repeats (1990), The Treatment (1993) or more recently the triptych Fewer Emergencies (2005) in which violent events are narrated with a boogie-woogie playing in the background. The horror of the story is emphasized by the musical counterpoint. The joy which pervades the stage through the use of music is denounced as artificial.https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/2955Crimpironyblack humouranempathetic musiccounterpointhappy ending
spellingShingle Aloysia Rousseau
L’horreur acoustique musiques « anempathiques » dans le théâtre de Martin Crimp
Sillages Critiques
Crimp
irony
black humour
anempathetic music
counterpoint
happy ending
title L’horreur acoustique musiques « anempathiques » dans le théâtre de Martin Crimp
title_full L’horreur acoustique musiques « anempathiques » dans le théâtre de Martin Crimp
title_fullStr L’horreur acoustique musiques « anempathiques » dans le théâtre de Martin Crimp
title_full_unstemmed L’horreur acoustique musiques « anempathiques » dans le théâtre de Martin Crimp
title_short L’horreur acoustique musiques « anempathiques » dans le théâtre de Martin Crimp
title_sort l horreur acoustique musiques anempathiques dans le theatre de martin crimp
topic Crimp
irony
black humour
anempathetic music
counterpoint
happy ending
url https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/2955
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