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Informationen zum Autor Michael Bull is Professor of Sound Studies at the University of Sussex. His works include Sounding Out the City: Personal Stereos and the Management of Everyday life (2000) and Sound Moves: iPod Culture and Urban Experience (2007) He has just completed a monograph on Sirens and is presently writing a monograph on Reinterpreting the Sounds of World War 1. He is the co-founding editor of the journals Senses and Society and Sound Studies (both with Routledge) and is editor of the book series The Study of Sound. Zusammenfassung The Routledge Companion to Sound Studies provides both upper level students and researchers with a comparative and historically informed understanding of the workings of sound in culture, while also mapping potential future directions for research in the field. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: Sound Studies and the Art of Listening Section 1 Introduction: Sonic Epistemologies and Debates Holger Schulze: Sound As Theory 1863 – 2014: From Hermann von Helmholtz to Salome Voeglin Mark Grimshaw: What is Sound Studies? David Howes: Embodiment and the Senses Nina Sun Eidsheim: Multisensory Investigation of Sound, Body and Voice. Neil Verma: The Return to Sound Aesthetics Christabel Stirling: Sound, Affect, Politics Section 2Introduction: Sonic Conflicts, Concepts and Culture Richard Rath: Silence and Noise Karin Bijsterveld: Sound Waves of Protest: Noise Abatement Movements David Goodman: Propaganda and Sound Alex Corey: Sounding Out Racial Difference Marie Thompson: Gendered Sound Amanda Cachia: Mapping Hearing Impairment: Sound/Tracks in the Corner Space Jonathan Pieslak: Sound and terrorism: Exploring the World of the Islamic State Section 3Introduction: Sonic Spaces and Places John M. Picker: The Turning of a Word: Soundscape to Soundscapes Tim Edensor: The Sonic Rhythms of Place Bennett Hogg: Geographies of Silence Meri Kyto: Public and Private Space: Sound Transformations Yiu-Fai Chow: Diaspora as Method. Music as Hope Section 4 Introduction: Sonic Skills: Finding, Recording and Researching. Salome Voeglin: Technologies of Sound Art Carolyn Birdsall: Found in Translation: Recording, Storing and Writing of sounds Shannon Mattern: Sonic Archaeologies Blake Durham: Curating Online Sounds Tom Rice: Ethnographies of Sound Frauke Berendt: Soundwalking Paul Nataraj: Surface Tension: Sheena and Bowie’s ‘Station to Station’ as Palimpsest. Section 5 Introduction: Technology, Culture and Sonic Experience. Julian Henriques and Hillegonda C Rietveld: Echo Thor Magnusson: Sound and Music in Networked Media Louis Neibur: Ordinary and Avant-Garde Sound in British Radio’s Early Years. Jacob Smith: Remastering the Recording Angel Alex Russo: Radio Sound Tom Artiss: Structures of Sonic feeling. Cara Wallis: Gender and the Telephonic Voice. Section 6 Introduction: Sound Connections James Mansell: Ways of Hearing: Sound, Culture and History Justin St Clair: Literature and Sound Martyn Hudson: The Sociology of Sound Ian Reyes: Popular Music as Sound and Listening Tim Wall: Radio Sound Ben Powis and Thomas F. Carter: Sporting sounds ...