Acoustic Spatiality

Experiences of listening can be appreciated as intensely relational, bringing us into contact with surrounding events, bodies and things. Given that sound propagates and expands outwardly, as a set of oscillations from a particular source, listening carries with it a sensual intensity, whereby audit...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brandon LaBelle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Zadar 2012-06-01
Series:[sic]
Online Access:http://www.sic-journal.org/ArticleView.aspx?aid=123
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849424311347052544
author Brandon LaBelle
author_facet Brandon LaBelle
author_sort Brandon LaBelle
collection DOAJ
description Experiences of listening can be appreciated as intensely relational, bringing us into contact with surrounding events, bodies and things. Given that sound propagates and expands outwardly, as a set of oscillations from a particular source, listening carries with it a sensual intensity, whereby auditory phenomena deliver intrusive and disruptive as well as soothing and assuring experiences. The physicality characteristic of sound suggests a deeply impressionistic, locational "knowledge structure" – that is, the ways in which listening affords processes of exchange, of being in the world, and from which we extend ourselves. Sound, as physical energy reflecting and absorbing into the materiality around us, and even one's self, provides a rich platform for understanding place and emplacement. Sound is always already a trace of location.Such features of auditory experience give suggestion for what I may call an acoustical paradigm – how sound sets in motion not only the material world but also the flows of the imagination, lending to forces of signification and social structure, and figuring us in relation to each other. The relationality of sound brings us into a steady web of interferences, each of which announces the promise or problematic of being somewhere.
format Article
id doaj-art-2b9bffeb228f4b86a2c1e073a1eaad9a
institution Kabale University
issn 1847-7755
language English
publishDate 2012-06-01
publisher University of Zadar
record_format Article
series [sic]
spelling doaj-art-2b9bffeb228f4b86a2c1e073a1eaad9a2025-08-20T03:30:14ZengUniversity of Zadar[sic]1847-77552012-06-012210.15291/sic/2.2.lc.1123Acoustic SpatialityBrandon LaBelleExperiences of listening can be appreciated as intensely relational, bringing us into contact with surrounding events, bodies and things. Given that sound propagates and expands outwardly, as a set of oscillations from a particular source, listening carries with it a sensual intensity, whereby auditory phenomena deliver intrusive and disruptive as well as soothing and assuring experiences. The physicality characteristic of sound suggests a deeply impressionistic, locational "knowledge structure" – that is, the ways in which listening affords processes of exchange, of being in the world, and from which we extend ourselves. Sound, as physical energy reflecting and absorbing into the materiality around us, and even one's self, provides a rich platform for understanding place and emplacement. Sound is always already a trace of location.Such features of auditory experience give suggestion for what I may call an acoustical paradigm – how sound sets in motion not only the material world but also the flows of the imagination, lending to forces of signification and social structure, and figuring us in relation to each other. The relationality of sound brings us into a steady web of interferences, each of which announces the promise or problematic of being somewhere.http://www.sic-journal.org/ArticleView.aspx?aid=123
spellingShingle Brandon LaBelle
Acoustic Spatiality
[sic]
title Acoustic Spatiality
title_full Acoustic Spatiality
title_fullStr Acoustic Spatiality
title_full_unstemmed Acoustic Spatiality
title_short Acoustic Spatiality
title_sort acoustic spatiality
url http://www.sic-journal.org/ArticleView.aspx?aid=123
work_keys_str_mv AT brandonlabelle acousticspatiality