Event details
Georgina Born
Georgina Born, Professor of Music and Anthropology at Oxford University and Professorial Fellow of Mansfield College, will present “On Nonhuman Sound: Sound as Relation.” How should we conceptualize sound? Does the conceptualization of sound as an object reify and detach what are inherently fluid and relational sonic processes? In this lecture, by relating two auto-ethnographic stories, one ordinary, the other life-changing, Prof. Born points to the affective subjectification of humans by nonhuman sound. In abandoning the language of the sound object, she contends that we become attuned to the human-and-more-than-human assemblages through which sound is both produced and experienced. This exercise, through sound, connects to recent thinking that places the nonhuman in symmetrical relation to the human, for sound is both co-produced nonhumanly—as an apparently independent physical process, 'object' or 'actor'—and yet also transubstantiates affectively and culturally into human experience.
This colloquium is part of the "Sound Knowledges" series, a Humanities Council Magic Project curated by Gavin Steingo.
About the Series:
In the past decade, “sound studies” has developed as a major field of scholarly investigation. Often conceptualized as an alternative to visually-oriented studies of media and society, sound studies has foregrounded otherwise neglected histories of listening and the acoustic, and has situated audition as a central figure in the production of cultural, social, and scientific knowledge. But despite continued calls for an approach that would cut across different modalities of knowledge production, research on sound remains woefully compartmentalized. By bringing together theorists, artists, and practitioners, this series promises to foster a more robust and genuinely crossdisciplinary approach to sonic knowledge.
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