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nr 3(9)
5-13
EN
In this essay, the author considers intertextuality in contemporary musical work, conceptualizing it not only as a critical category and as an artistic convention, but also as an aesthetic strategy. Listening for texts, as it were, opens the work for influences and gives it new purposes. The multiple texts, which are mutually interdependent, alter each other’s meaning and are “read” and “re-read” during aesthetic experience. Depending on the listener, these meanings are more or less pronounced; some are seen as primary, while others are seen as secondary. Sometimes they are co-dependent and meaningful together, but sometimes they shy each other out. The multilayered quality of the work is acknowledged and seen as important even before individual meanings can be discovered. The author proposes a look at intertextuality in reference to musical works by Steve Reich, (e.g. Different trains, 1988). The author uses Ryszard Nycz’s definition of intertextuality and confronts it with Umberto Eco’s idea of interpretation and the structural openness of art. Putting forward a concept of listening-in as a necessary element of receiving and understanding certain musical works, she suggests accepting an intertextual aesthetic strategy for a satisfactory aesthetic experience. Assuming the presence of multiple texts, which are different in character and meaning, and accepting their interdependence, changes the reception of the work and colors its qualities. The challenge is not only to seek out different texts hidden behind the purely musical face of the work but to find out the way they influence each other, knowing full well that the major or minor role those texts play depend on the listener as much as on the author.
EN
In this paper, the author maintains that the term “ideal border”, used by Roman Ingarden several times in his writing on musical perception, has more to offer than its face value suggests. The notion can have multiple meanings and at fi rst it may seem that it only underlines incoherence of the philosopher’s concept. However, the author of this paper thinks that the notion of “ideal border” points towards diffi culties impossible to overcome in defi ning a musical work — provided that the notion is taken seriously, i.e. as a vital element of Ingarden’s theory, and not as a fi tting metaphor. The notion of “ideal border” in relation to a musical work and its perception, as the author believes, refl ects an ambiguous state of the ontological grounding of a musical work, while confi rming the proposed character of Ingarden’s overall theory in an inspiring way.
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