Arqueología del lenguaje en las composiciones de Meredith Monk. Musicalidad, sustancialidad, decreación

  1. Aguirre Martínez, Guillermo 1
  1. 1 Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, España.
Revista:
Káñina: Revista de Artes y Letras de la Universidad de Costa Rica

ISSN: 0378-0473 2215-2636

Any de publicació: 2022

Títol de l'exemplar: Káñina (September-December) Continuous publication

Volum: 46

Número: 3

Pàgines: 31-51

Tipus: Article

DOI: 10.15517/RK.V46I3.52229 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openAccés obert editor

Altres publicacions en: Káñina: Revista de Artes y Letras de la Universidad de Costa Rica

Resum

Meredith Monk’s vocal music is defined by the presence of a disintegrated language —a language which has abandoned its normative nature— The voice, accompanied by a thorough gestural language, falls into a precultural, protolinguistic stratum. With his work, Monk —from a wide variety of aesthetics proposals: music, poetry, dramaturgy, audiovisual— gets into the area of Cultural Anthropology. In her compositions, the voice emerges always as music, but this music, first and foremost, seeks refuge in different human expressions as sighs, moans, screams or laughs. Throughout the following pages a synthetic view of Monk’s aesthetics from an epistemological basis will be shown, a basis where notions like game or mimesis play an axial role, as well as some others notions related to those, especially the dialectics between creation and decreation, or the concept musilanguage (as proposed by Robert N. Bellah, Steven Brown and Steven Mithen). This last term refers to music as basis of language.