New directions in sonic history
Sound Studies is a very young and diverse field of research with a long prehistory. Since at least the 1970s, artists and scholars have been proposing ways to understand contemporary and historical modes of listening, the emergence of new listening devices, and how communities gather around sound experiences. This talk will provide an introduction to the more recent history of the field since 2004. It will also look at current developments in the 2020s to decolonize sound studies and investigate aural diversity. Finally, the talk will focus on examples of vernacular media culture that document how the cultural study of sound allows us to interpret life and culture – in the present, in history, and in the future.
This lecture is first of the annual lecture series ‘New Directions in Sonic History.’ As part of the research project Sound Affairs: Sonic Histories of Foreign Relations, 1700-1990, a leading researcher will give an annual public lecture on the importance of the study of sound (and silence) in the science of history from various thematic, chronological, and disciplinary perspectives. Professor Josephine Hoegaerts will moderate the Q&A after the talk.
Read more on the research project and the annual lecture series on the website of Sound Affairs.
SPUI25 is the academic-cultural podium of Amsterdam. Since 2007, we have been giving scientists, authors, artists and other thinkers the opportunity to shine a light on issues that occupy, inspire or concern them. In cooperation with a large number of academic and cultural partners, we organize between 250 and 300 freely accessible programs per year. These are enriching, often interdisciplinary programs that move between science and culture, fact and fiction.
SPUI25 is one of the UvA podia in the University Quarter.