The Political Possibility of Sound: Fragments of Listening
Autor Dr Salomé Voegelinen Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 oct 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781501312168
ISBN-10: 1501312162
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1501312162
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Caracteristici
The content and themes of the book contribute to and develop a current socio-political focus in sound studies, while also continuing the pertinent connections between aesthetic practice, political reality, and philosophical interpretation
Notă biografică
Salomé Voegelin is Professor of Sound at the London College of Communication, UAL, UK. An artist and writer, she is the author of Listening to Noise and Silence (Bloomsbury, 2010) and Sonic Possible Worlds (Bloomsbury, 2014).
Cuprins
AcknowledgementsLight Song (A Text Score)1. Introduction: Writing Fragments2. The Political Possibility of Sound3. Hearing Volumes: Architecture, Light and Words4. Geographies of Sound: Performing Impossible Territories5. Morality of the Invisible, Ethics of the Inaudible 6. Hearing Subjectivities: Bodies, Forms and Formlessness 7. Sonic Materialism: A Philosophy of Digging 8. Reading Fragments of Listening, Hearing Vertical Lines of WordsPutting on Lipstick (A Text Score)Index
Recenzii
The book seeks to question the ways we think about the relationship between sound, politics and art.
Voegelin's texts are supple yet sticky and recursive, they cling and evolve. Reading them is not a process of transmitted insights and straightforward reception. Rather it is an experience of . shedding preconceptions and encountering within printed language the mobile formlessness and unlimited materiality of sound. Her essays touch on political realities: enforced migration; razor wire in the Golan Heights; Obama's authorisation of drone attacks. Yet the imagined worlds of Sun Ra and Ursula Le Guin's science fiction also have a recurrent role. That such seemingly divergent elements should coincide within the political possibility of sound makes this book a stimulating, important and challenging experience.
This book stems from her [Voegelin's] previous 'Listening to Noise and Silence' and 'Sonic Possible Worlds', both of which significantly contributed to the sound art discourse by opening possible interpretations and possibilities for the soundscape. This book is more adventurous than the previous ones ... There's an abundance of ideas, which the reader can possibly embrace.
Salomé Voegelin's careful, poetic essays explore what she calls the 'complexity of the ephemeral' in several registers at once - political, personal, philosophical, cultural. Each essay explores the possibility of a politics of sound that emphasizes always the 'incomplete, the unfamiliar, the unrecognizable and the unheard?'. Describing the emergence of a 'sonic cosmopolitanism', Voegelin's text operates both as multiple entryways into various artists and sonic practices, but the essays also work as a united, stirring plea for the polyphony of the present.
Drifting in and out of physical matter, The Political Possibility of Sound is an in-depth adventure into hearing, listening and cross-referencing the politics of sound and also its making. This is a very slow read in a fast world - it is like a rare intellectual dream world of expanded possibilities of the audio thinking space. A must-read for all musicians!
Voegelin's writing around and through sound and sonic works [is] both generous and generative . she enters the listening experience with an expansive curiosity that is willing to ponder the what happened? from multiple entryways and use the writing to think through and with sound, generating a response-ably-worded philosophy of sound, a sonic thinking-with an abundance of other writers and creators as well.
Voegelin's texts are supple yet sticky and recursive, they cling and evolve. Reading them is not a process of transmitted insights and straightforward reception. Rather it is an experience of . shedding preconceptions and encountering within printed language the mobile formlessness and unlimited materiality of sound. Her essays touch on political realities: enforced migration; razor wire in the Golan Heights; Obama's authorisation of drone attacks. Yet the imagined worlds of Sun Ra and Ursula Le Guin's science fiction also have a recurrent role. That such seemingly divergent elements should coincide within the political possibility of sound makes this book a stimulating, important and challenging experience.
This book stems from her [Voegelin's] previous 'Listening to Noise and Silence' and 'Sonic Possible Worlds', both of which significantly contributed to the sound art discourse by opening possible interpretations and possibilities for the soundscape. This book is more adventurous than the previous ones ... There's an abundance of ideas, which the reader can possibly embrace.
Salomé Voegelin's careful, poetic essays explore what she calls the 'complexity of the ephemeral' in several registers at once - political, personal, philosophical, cultural. Each essay explores the possibility of a politics of sound that emphasizes always the 'incomplete, the unfamiliar, the unrecognizable and the unheard?'. Describing the emergence of a 'sonic cosmopolitanism', Voegelin's text operates both as multiple entryways into various artists and sonic practices, but the essays also work as a united, stirring plea for the polyphony of the present.
Drifting in and out of physical matter, The Political Possibility of Sound is an in-depth adventure into hearing, listening and cross-referencing the politics of sound and also its making. This is a very slow read in a fast world - it is like a rare intellectual dream world of expanded possibilities of the audio thinking space. A must-read for all musicians!
Voegelin's writing around and through sound and sonic works [is] both generous and generative . she enters the listening experience with an expansive curiosity that is willing to ponder the what happened? from multiple entryways and use the writing to think through and with sound, generating a response-ably-worded philosophy of sound, a sonic thinking-with an abundance of other writers and creators as well.