Like a Record: The Muse and Mimesis of The Forensic Records Society

dc.contributor.author Jason Mark Ward
dc.date JAN 1
dc.date.accessioned 2025-10-06T16:19:41Z
dc.date.issued 2024
dc.description.abstract What is the correct way to appreciate art and specifically the art of the pop song? This is the question at the heart of Magnus Mills's 2017 novella The Forensic Records Society which reads like an absurd comic parable of how men (specifically) repeatedly fail to appreciate art and reduce even the most inoffensive acts of creativity to dysfunctional bureaucracies. This paper briefly discusses how the book tackles aesthetics community gender and commodity fetishism and outlines its uncanny parallels with Adorno's Sociology of Music (1976). Most significantly the argument put forward here is that this deceptively brief and simple novella is truly an artfully-constructed postmodern performative text - a work of histiographic metafiction which manipulates time evades period setting and questions historical certainty, a concrete-poetry inspired novella that deploys mimetic cover art musical allusions numerology nominal characterization melodic repetition and affirmative character arcs to replicate and pay homage to the subject of the book - the iconic 7-inch three-minute pop single. The conclusion asserts that The Forensic Records Society is an intermedial text that ironically benefits from the perpetual online distractions of the internet and pop music thus providing a novel 21st century reading experience.
dc.identifier.doi 10.1080/00111619.2022.2142085
dc.identifier.issn 0011-1619
dc.identifier.issn 1939-9138
dc.identifier.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00111619.2022.2142085
dc.identifier.uri https://gcris.yasar.edu.tr/handle/123456789/5949
dc.language.iso English
dc.publisher ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
dc.relation.ispartof Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction
dc.source CRITIQUE-STUDIES IN CONTEMPORARY FICTION
dc.title Like a Record: The Muse and Mimesis of The Forensic Records Society
dc.type Article
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gdc.description.endpage 21
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gdc.description.volume 65
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gdc.virtual.author Ward, Jason Mark
oaire.citation.endPage 21
oaire.citation.startPage 13
person.identifier.orcid Ward- Jason Mark/0000-0002-4894-3847
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