Music and Language in Ancient Verse: The Dynamics of an Antagonistic Concord

In antiquity, the relationship between “music”, “poetry”, and “language” was very different from the way they relate to each other today, for back then each of these mediums was endowed with a distinct, independent signifying code expressing a semiosis all its own. However, these separate “semiosphe...

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Main Author: Fionn Bennett
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-01-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/5/1/8
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spelling doaj-f20ea814ee9d4f1da3bd9f8833bdffc52020-11-24T23:49:20ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872016-01-0151810.3390/h5010008h5010008Music and Language in Ancient Verse: The Dynamics of an Antagonistic ConcordFionn Bennett0C.I.R.L.E.P. (Centre Interdisciplinaire de Recherche sur les Langues et la Pensée)—EA 4299, Université de Reims, 51096 Reims, FranceIn antiquity, the relationship between “music”, “poetry”, and “language” was very different from the way they relate to each other today, for back then each of these mediums was endowed with a distinct, independent signifying code expressing a semiosis all its own. However, these separate “semiospheres” nonetheless never ceased growing towards and into one another. This is so because music and “melic” poetry were believed to have the capacity to denote something ordinary language could not denote but could not do without, namely “etymonic truth”. As a result, the users of ordinary language were obsessed with divining the “hyponoia” poets encoded in music and chant. Above all, they wanted this hyponoia to constitute the signifié of their language. For this reason, the meaning expressed in language was subject to a process in which it was constantly being “deported” from its ordinary acceptations and transported towards meanings encoded in music. However, this “deterritorialization” of ordinary meaning never resulted in a full “reterritorialization” upon the terrain of the truth encoded in music. Musicians and poets would not tolerate it. As far as they were concerned, music and poetry would cease being “truthful” if the semiosis they conveyed and the semiosis conveyed by language were interchangeable. For, again, as a signifying code, prosaic language was sui generis incapable of representing the truth. Hence, the relationship between these three codes consisted of a sort of intersemiotic dynamic equilibrium in which language was continuously evolving towards a non-linguistic expression of meaning which conferred truth upon it and what it means. And yet the music and poetry which were the source of that truth deliberately kept language from consummating the aspiration of accosting the truth they encoded. This paper explores the mechanics of this intersemiotic dynamic equilibrium.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/5/1/8Ancient Greek Versediglossiabi-narrativity and “Poikilia”musical meaning in “Song Culture”music and truthmusic in poetryetymology and poetrysemiotics of melic poetryintermedial intertextuality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fionn Bennett
spellingShingle Fionn Bennett
Music and Language in Ancient Verse: The Dynamics of an Antagonistic Concord
Humanities
Ancient Greek Verse
diglossia
bi-narrativity and “Poikilia”
musical meaning in “Song Culture”
music and truth
music in poetry
etymology and poetry
semiotics of melic poetry
intermedial intertextuality
author_facet Fionn Bennett
author_sort Fionn Bennett
title Music and Language in Ancient Verse: The Dynamics of an Antagonistic Concord
title_short Music and Language in Ancient Verse: The Dynamics of an Antagonistic Concord
title_full Music and Language in Ancient Verse: The Dynamics of an Antagonistic Concord
title_fullStr Music and Language in Ancient Verse: The Dynamics of an Antagonistic Concord
title_full_unstemmed Music and Language in Ancient Verse: The Dynamics of an Antagonistic Concord
title_sort music and language in ancient verse: the dynamics of an antagonistic concord
publisher MDPI AG
series Humanities
issn 2076-0787
publishDate 2016-01-01
description In antiquity, the relationship between “music”, “poetry”, and “language” was very different from the way they relate to each other today, for back then each of these mediums was endowed with a distinct, independent signifying code expressing a semiosis all its own. However, these separate “semiospheres” nonetheless never ceased growing towards and into one another. This is so because music and “melic” poetry were believed to have the capacity to denote something ordinary language could not denote but could not do without, namely “etymonic truth”. As a result, the users of ordinary language were obsessed with divining the “hyponoia” poets encoded in music and chant. Above all, they wanted this hyponoia to constitute the signifié of their language. For this reason, the meaning expressed in language was subject to a process in which it was constantly being “deported” from its ordinary acceptations and transported towards meanings encoded in music. However, this “deterritorialization” of ordinary meaning never resulted in a full “reterritorialization” upon the terrain of the truth encoded in music. Musicians and poets would not tolerate it. As far as they were concerned, music and poetry would cease being “truthful” if the semiosis they conveyed and the semiosis conveyed by language were interchangeable. For, again, as a signifying code, prosaic language was sui generis incapable of representing the truth. Hence, the relationship between these three codes consisted of a sort of intersemiotic dynamic equilibrium in which language was continuously evolving towards a non-linguistic expression of meaning which conferred truth upon it and what it means. And yet the music and poetry which were the source of that truth deliberately kept language from consummating the aspiration of accosting the truth they encoded. This paper explores the mechanics of this intersemiotic dynamic equilibrium.
topic Ancient Greek Verse
diglossia
bi-narrativity and “Poikilia”
musical meaning in “Song Culture”
music and truth
music in poetry
etymology and poetry
semiotics of melic poetry
intermedial intertextuality
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/5/1/8
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