Aurality : listening and knowledge in nineteenth-century Colombia
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Aurality : listening and knowledge in nineteenth-century Colombia
(Sign, storage, transmission / a series edited by Jonathan Sterne and Lisa Gitelman)
Duke University Press, 2014
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [231]-251) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In this audacious book, Ana Maria Ochoa Gautier explores how listening has been central to the production of notions of language, music, voice, and sound that determine the politics of life. Drawing primarily from nineteenth-century Colombian sources, Ochoa Gautier locates sounds produced by different living entities at the juncture of the human and nonhuman. Her "acoustically tuned" analysis of a wide array of texts reveals multiple debates on the nature of the aural. These discussions were central to a politics of the voice harnessed in the service of the production of different notions of personhood and belonging. In Ochoa Gautier's groundbreaking work, Latin America and the Caribbean emerge as a historical site where the politics of life and the politics of expression inextricably entangle the musical and the linguistic, knowledge and the sensorial.
Table of Contents
Preface and Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. The Ear and the Voice in the Lettered City's Geophysical History 1
1. On Howls and Pitches 31
2. On Popular Song 77
3. On the Ethnographic Ear 123
4. On Vocal Immunity 165
Epilogue. The Oral in the Aural 207
Notes 215
References 231
Index 252
by "Nielsen BookData"