冰岛我们

Daryl Jamieson
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引用次数: 1

摘要

Utamakura是一种传统的日本技术,用于识别,解释和利用在几个世纪的诗歌实践中围绕特定地名积累的互文意义网络。一般来说,这些utamakura的地方最初(在7 -9世纪)与神(kami)有关,尽管在后来的时期,在大多数情况下,这些意义网络包括(并经常成为主导)世俗而不是精神联系。日本诗人高桥Mutsuo以宇镰仓为主题发表了诗歌和理论著作,他试图恢复宇镰仓地名的原始精神力量。他还将这一概念扩展到日本以外具有神话精神重要性的地方,主要是在希腊罗马世界。从高桥对这种中世纪诗歌装置的复兴中获得灵感,我目前正在进行一个为期三年的项目,创作一系列(目前有七个)多媒体室内乐作品,称为utamakura系列,这些作品的灵感交替来自日本传统地点和北欧地点。我2018年的作品《utamakura 2: Arnardalar》(小提琴,钢琴和固定视听媒体)是对西峡湾冰岛Arnardulr山谷的探索,这是Fóstbræðra传奇故事早期关键场景的设置。我的作品既借鉴了传奇故事中对这个地方的描述,也借鉴了今天这个地方的现状,突出了时间的流逝,探索了艺术的力量,将自己注入到物理地点,并改变人们对它的看法。在本文中,我将解释写作这篇文章所涉及的概念过程,重点是我作品的跨文化美学,以及日本的艺术和宗教哲学如何为斯堪的纳维亚土地提供创造性的新视角,斯堪的纳维亚土地是北方最古老的文学的背景。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Icelandic Kami
Utamakura is a traditional Japanese technique of recognizing, interpreting, and utilizing the web of intertextual meanings which have accrued around particular place names over centuries of poetic practice. In general, these utamakura places were originally (in the 7th-9th centuries) associated with Shintō gods (kami), though in later periods the web of meanings in most cases came to include (and often became dominated by) secular rather than spiritual associations. Japanese poet Takahashi Mutsuo, who has published both poetic and theoretical works on the subject of utamakura, seeks to recover the original spiritual power of utamakura place names. He has also expanded the concept to include places of mythic spiritual importance outside of Japan, mostly in the Greco-Roman world. Taking inspiration from Takahashi's revivification of this mediaeval poetic device, I am currently in the midst of a three-year project to write a series of (at this point seven) multimedia chamber music pieces called the utamakura series, pieces inspired alternately by traditional Japanese locations and locations in Northern Europe. My 2018 piece utamakura 2: Arnardalar for violin, piano, and fixed audiovisual media is an exploration of the Icelandic valley of Arnardulr in the Westfjords, the setting of a key early scene in the Fóstbræðra saga. My work draws on both the saga's descriptions of the place and the current place as it is today, highlighting the flux of time and exploring the power of art to infuse itself into – and change perceptions of – physical locations. In this paper, I will explain the conceptual processes involved in writing the piece, with an emphasis on the intercultural aesthetic of my work and how Japanese philosophy of art and religion can offer a creative new perspective on the Scandinavian lands which are the settings of the North's oldest literature.
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