英文摘要 |
Wallace Stevens' poetry does not try to directly express reality in the way of an empirical ”description” but rather makes us imagine the real (external, empirical) world so intensely that in some way we enter or merge with it. But the force of this ”imagining” is that of the vast system of langue, including the chaotic disruptions of metaphor and even occasional nonsense words chosen for their sound, when it is enacted as parole, ”poetic speech.”While the central role of music in Stevens' poiesis has been noted before, this paper will look at his poetic space as a ”musical space” in terms of (1) chaos and information theory, especially as explicated by Michel Serres; (2) the problem of ”place” in Stevens' poetry and Deleuze-Guattari's view of music as the ”deterritorialization” of animal communication (e.g. birdsong); and (3) Elizabeth Grosz's Darwinian-based analysis of music as the force or expression of a desire which can also be seen, it will now be suggested, as curiosity (the desire to know). The central idea will thus be that we might take the ”place” of Stevens' poems as a musical space now understood as a space of tentative exploration, silence and circularity, a space of open-ended or purely speculative questioning. |