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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Towards a Typology of Poetic Forms

From language to metrics and beyond

Edited by Jean-Louis Aroui and Andy Arleo
Université Paris 8 / Université de Nantes

2009. xiv, 428 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 0819 4 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
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978 90 272 8904 9 / EUR 105.00 / USD 158.00
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Metrics is often defined as a discipline that concerns itself with the study of meters. In this volume the term is used in a broader sense that more or less coincides with the traditional notion of “versification”. Understood this way, metrics is an eminently complex object that displays variation over time and in space, that concerns forms of a great variety and with different statuses (meters, rhymes, stanzas, prescribed forms, syllabification rules, nursery rhymes, slogans, musical textsetting, ablaut reduplication etc.), and that as a cultural manifestation is performed in a variety of ways (sung, chanted, spoken, read) that can have direct consequences on how it is structured. This profusion of forms is thought to correspond, at the level of perception, to a limited number of cognitive mechanisms that allow us to perceive and to represent regularly iterating forms. This volume proposes a relatively coherent overall vision by distinguishing four main families of metrical forms, each clearly independent of the others and amenable to separate typologies.


Table of contents

Contributors
vii–xii
Acknowledgments
xiii–xiv
Introduction: Proposals for metrical typology
Jean-Louis Aroui
1–40
Part I. Isochronous metrics
Textsetting as constraint conflict
Bruce Hayes
43–62
Comparing musical textsetting in French and in English songs
Francois Dell and John Halle
63–78
Bavarian Zwiefache: Investigating the interface between rhythm, metrics and song
Patrizia Noel Aziz Hanna and Robert Vetterle
79–100
Natural Versification in French and German counting-out rhymes
Andreas Dufter and Patrizia Noel Aziz Hanna
101–122
Minimal chronometric forms: On the durational metrics of 2-2-stroke groups
Benoît de Cornulier
123–142
Symmetry and children’s poetry in sign languages
Marion Blondel and Christopher Miller
143–164
Part II. Prosodic metrics
Pairs and triplets: A theory of metrical verse
Nigel Fabb and Morris Halle
167–192
Generative linguistics and Arabic metrics
Bruno Paoli
193–208
On the meter of Middle English alliterative verse
Donka Minkova
209–228
The Russian Auden and the Russianness of Auden: Meaning and form in a translation by Brodsky
Nila Friedberg
229–246
Towards a universal definition of the caesura
Marc Dominicy and Mihai Nasta
247–266
Metrical alignment
Kristin Hanson
267–286
Rephrasing line-end restrictions
Carlos Piera
287–304
Part III. Para-metrical phenomena
Pif paf poof: Ablaut reduplication in children’s counting-out rhymes
Andy Arleo
307–324
The phonology of elision and metrical figures in Italian versification
Oreste Floquet
325–334
Part IV. Macrostructural metrics
Convention and parody in the rhyming of Tristan Corbière
Dominique Billy
337–354
The metrics of Sephardic song
José Domínguez Caparrós
355–370
A rule of metrical uniformity in old Hungarian poetry
Iván Horváth
371–384
Metrical structure of the European sonnet
Jean-Louis Aroui
385–402
Persons index
403–410
Languages index
411–414
Subjects index
415–428


There are very few books of high quality in the field of metrical study, and even fewer which bring together leading experts focusing on specific problems of verse-form; this wide-ranging volume is therefore to be warmly welcomed.
Derek Attridge, University of York

The diversity of the field of metrics requires people to define their categories, and make them comparable with the work of others. With its content divided into motivated thematic sections, this volume should help in achieving just that. This is a truly good thing.
Tomas Riad, Stockholm University