On buses, trains, and streets over the past decade and more, youths in particular but increasingly older people as well tune into their personal stereos and tune out city sounds. Why? What does the personal stereo mean to these people and to urban culture more generally? Does it heighten reality? Enable people to cope? Isolate? Create a space? Combat boredom? Far too commonplace and enduring to be considered a fashion accessory, the personal stereo has become a potent artefact symbolizing contemporary urban life. This book opens up a new area of urban studies, the auditory experience of self and place. In doing so, it enhances our understanding of the role of media and technology in everyday life. Urban, cultural and anthropological studies have been dominated by explanations of experiences drawing upon notions of visuality. But culture always has an auditory component that shapes attitudes and behaviour -- perhaps nowhere more so than in the city where sound is intensified. This book challenges strictly visual approaches to culture by proposing an auditory understanding of behaviour through an ethnographic analysis of personal stereo use.
The author reformulates our understanding of how people, through the senses, negotiate central experiences of the urban, such as space, place, time and the management of everyday experience, and examines the critical role technology plays. This book will be of interest to anyone seeking a fresh and incisive approach to urban studies, cultural studies, anthropology, sociology, or media and communication studies.
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Aims to enhance our understanding of the role of media and technology in everyday life. This book challenges the visual approaches to culture by proposing an auditory understanding of behaviour through an ethnographic analysis of personal stereo use. It is for those seeking an approach to urban studies, cultural studies, anthropology, and more.
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Bull constructs a forbiddingly cultstudsy but nonetheless fascinating phenomenology of the personal stereo. The Guardian Through narcissism, voyerism, and urbanism, Sounding Out the City listens to its fields' erotics and resists the temptation to turn sound into geography. It sticks close to the taboos of what everybody knows but rarely says,that which is traditionally passed by on the way to culture. Through narcissism, voyerism, and urbanism, Sounding Out the City listens to its fields' erotics and resists the temptation to turn sound into geography. It sticks close to the taboos of what ever This text was thought provoking to the reviewer. It is an analysis that should be read by those interested in the interaction of the routine with imagination in media use and those looking to develop understanding of urban life that recognize the importance of sound. Journal of Consumer Culture Reaffirms the Walkman's iconic status in cultural studies provides interesting insights. Times Higher Education Supplement
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Also available in hardback, 9781859733370 GBP50.00 (June, 2000)
Also available in hardback, 9781859733370 £50.00 (June, 2000)
This provocative series focuses on the social relations involved in material practices. The study of Material Culture has stimulated a new body of research which brings together areas as diverse as the artwork of record sleeves, shopping, bitter conflicts over ancient monuments, digital fonts, craft skills and the political economy of consumption. This series demonstrates the innovative and critical edge that a material culture perspective may bring to bear upon a wide range of academic concerns.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781859733424
Publisert
2000-06-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Berg Publishers
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
11 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
216
Forfatter