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Hearing cultures: essays on sound, listening, and modernity (1st)

Erlmann, Veit(Edited by)
Part of the Wenner-Gren International Symposium Series series
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Vision is typically treated as the defining sense of the modern era and a powerful vehicle for colonial and postcolonial domination.

This is in marked contrast to the almost total absence of accounts of hearing in larger cultural processes.

Hearing Cultures is a timely examination of the elusive, often evocative, and sometimes cacophonous auditory sense - from the intersection of sound and modernity, through to the relationship between audio-technological advances and issues of personal and urban space.

As cultures and communities grapple with the massive changes wrought by modernization and globalization, Hearing Cultures presents an important new approach to understanding our world.

It answers such intriguing questions as: Did people in Shakespeare's time hear differently from us?

In what way does technology affect our ears? Why do people in Egypt increasingly listen to taped religious sermons?

Why did Enlightenment doctors believe that music was an essential cure?

What happens acoustically in cross-cultural first encounters?

Why do Runa Indians in the Amazon basin now consider onomatopoetic speech child's talk?

The ear, as much as the eye, nose, mouth and hand, offers a way into experience.

All five senses are instruments that record, interpret and engage with the world.

This book shows how sound offers a refreshing new lens through which to examine culture and complex social issues.

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£150.00
Product Details
Routledge
1000213617 / 9781000213614
eBook (EPUB)
306.4
24/06/2020
England
English
250 pages
Copy: 30%; print: 30%
Reprint. Previously issued in print: Oxford: Berg, 2004 Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.