2026 年 24 巻 p. 75-90
This paper analyzes Truman Capote’s The Muses Are Heard and argues that it marks his emergence as a political and social critic. Writing from the margins—the “backstage” of the cultural Cold War—Capote exposes the staged “front” where states use art to “fence in” history. He loosens the fixed U.S.–Soviet ideological binary by presenting two vantage points: a Norwegian traveler who notes psychological affinities between the two peoples, and a young female secretary whose daily work, cultural frictions, and brief romance reveal realities that official scripts omit.
A core element of his critique is the contrast between the magnificent but lifeless “dead art” sponsored by the state and the “living art” of improvised jazz performed by the African American cast. This visceral, improvised music addresses the body before the mind; its rhythms connect strangers across language and ideology, exceed official state intentions, and leave durable traces in personal memory. It is another “voice of the muses.” By tracking these unscripted moments, Capote develops a critical method for finding truth in peripheral voices and everyday scenes. The Muses Are Heard thus stands as a pivotal step toward the form he would later call a “nonfiction novel.”