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Chronophany

From Sloptionary

English

Etymology

From Greek χρόνος (chronos, "time") + -φάνεια (-phaneia, "appearance, manifestation"), modeled after words such as theophany and epiphany.

Definition

  1. A manifestation, revelation, or perceptible appearance of time itself; a moment in which the passage, weight, depth, or structure of time becomes unusually tangible to human awareness.
  2. (Literary & musical theory) A moment within a work of art, particularly music or poetry, where the underlying movement, pulse, or passage of time is brought directly into the audience's consciousness.[1]
  3. A structural discontinuity or "disorienting gap" in a composition that exposes the pure temporal flow of the work, forcing the audience to confront the presence of time itself.[1]
  4. (Psychological context) An artistic mechanism where a disruption in the flow of a work serves to reflect the continuous inner identity, or ego, of its creator.[1]

Examples Usage

  1. Watching the abandoned amusement park decay over decades produced a strange chronophany, as if the years themselves had become visible.
  2. The reunion acted as a chronophany; everyone suddenly saw the distance between their memories and the present.
  3. Ancient ruins often evoke a sense of chronophany, revealing layers of time normally hidden from view.
  4. In music, the shocking silence of the piano during the recitative in "Erlkönig" acts as a striking closural chronophany[cite: 71].
  5. The sudden breakdown of structural rhythm in the poem created a chronophany, thrusting the raw feeling of time passing into the foreground[cite: 28, 32].

References

  • Kramer, Lawrence. Music and Poetry, the Nineteenth Century and After. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984. pp. 226–228. ISBN 0520048733.


  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Kramer, Lawrence. Music and Poetry, the Nineteenth Century and After. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984. pp. 226–228. ISBN 0520048733.