Front cover image for The audible past : cultural origins of sound reproduction

The audible past : cultural origins of sound reproduction

Jonathan Sterne (Author)
This book explores the cultural origins of sound reproduction. It describes a distinctive sound culture that gave birth to the sound recording and transmission devices so ubiquitous in modern life. With an ear for the unexpected, a scholar and musician uses the technological and cultural precursors of telephony, phonography, and radio as an entry point into a history of sound in its own right. The author studies the constantly shifting boundary between phenomena organized as "sound" and "not sound." In this book, this history crisscrosses the liminal regions between bodies and machines, originals and copies, nature and culture, and life and death. Blending cultural studies and the history of communication technology, the author follows modern sound technologies back through a historical labyrinth. Along the way, he encounters capitalists and inventors, musicians and philosophers, embalmers and grave-robbers, doctors and patients, deaf children and their teachers, professionals and hobbyists, folklorists and tribal singers. This book tracks the connections between the history of sound and the defining features of modernity: from developments in medicine, physics, and philosophy to the tumultuous shifts of industrial capitalism, colonialism, urbanization, modern technology, and the rise of a new middle class. -- Adapted from back cover
Print Book, English, 2003
Duke University Press, Durham, 2003
sound art
xvi, 450 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
9780822330134, 9780822330042, 082233013X, 0822330040
50002447
Machines to hear for them
Techniques of listening
Audible technique and media
Plastic aurality : technologies into media
The social genesis of sound fidelity
A resonant tomb
Conclusion : Audible futures
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