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From the Postsonic to the Sonified From the Postsonic to the Sonified
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Parameters of Sonification Parameters of Sonification
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Aesthetics of Sonification Aesthetics of Sonification
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Accessibility Accessibility
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Reanimation as Sonification Reanimation as Sonification
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Laughing with the Dead Laughing with the Dead
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Notes Notes
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References References
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23 The Recording That Never Wanted to Be Heard and Other Stories of Sonification
Get accessJonathan Sterne is in the Department of Art History and Communication Studies at McGill University.
Mitchell Akiyama, McGill University, Canada
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Published:21 November 2012
Cite
Abstract
This article uses the story of the phonautograph as a way of investigating the development of a cluster of practices called “sonification,” or the transformation of nonsonic data into audible sound. It begins with introducing the phonautograph and reasons as to why its study is relevant under the field of sound studies. It considers the possibility of listening to a phonautograph recording as marking an aesthetic and epistemic shift in the history of sound. It then reviews a range of practices of sonification, all of which move data and experience between the sonic and nonsonic registers. This study advances three nested methodological propositions. It argues for attending to the modularity of sensory technologies, modularity of the relations between senses, subjects, and technologies, modularity of the senses themselves. Finally, the article concludes by returning to the case of the phonoautograph in order to advance some speculative propositions regarding the present conjuncture in the history of sound.
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