Music,
radio, and TV broadcasts; blaring loudspeakers, public announcements, street
vendors; city sounds, sounds of progress, sounds of revolution, or sounds of
change; sounds deliberately produced or emerging unintentionally, serving a
disciplinary function or expressing forms of freedom; musical as well as
non-musical (functional) sounds; overwhelming natural sounds of rain forests,
the pampas, and highlands.
Latin
America is filled with sounds; indeed, its cities might count among the
noisiest of the world, in notable contrast with the (relative) quietness of its
rural areas and wild nature. Is it possible to identify specific Latin American
soundscapes? How can they be characterized? What can be heard there? How should
we listen to them, experience them, affect and be affected by them? What is
their political, social, religious, ethical, economic, aesthetic influence or
meaning?
The Journal of Sonic Studies is searching for scholarly and artistic contributions that
deal with the connections and relationships between Latin American history,
culture, society, and politics and the production, distribution, and reception
of sounds, noises, and silence. The broader aim of this special issue is to
establish “sound” as an analytical category that provides us with challenging
perspectives on and a new understanding of Latin America. Therefore, our call
does not focus on a particular historical period or research methodology, but
seeks to bring together scholars and artist-researchers who share an interest
in Latin American soundscapes.
Themes for
submission may include but are not limited to:
- The sonic identity of any Latin American space
- Differences between Western and Latin American soundscapes
- Latin American (contemporary) sound art
- The role, position, and function of music in contemporary Latin American societies
- Sonic histories of Latin America
- Listening cultures of Latin America
- Politics of sounds or the sounds of politics in Latin America
- The role of silence in Latin American societies and/or discourses
- The role of sounds in Latin American religious practices
- Rural “versus” urban soundscapes
Deadline
Potential
contributors are invited to submit completed essays by September 1, 2019.
For more
information, or to submit an essay, please contact noise@sonicstudies.org
The Journal of Sonic Studies is a peer-reviewed, online, open access journal providing a
platform for theorists and artist-researchers who would like to present
relevant work regarding auditory cultures, to further our collective
understanding of the impact and importance of sound for our cultures. The
editors welcome scholarly as well as artistic research and also expect all
contributions to have a firm theoretical grounding. Priority is given to
contributions that explicitly use the Internet as a medium, e.g. by inserting
A/V materials, hyperlinks, and the use of non-conventional structures. JSS
invites potential contributors to use the Research Catalogue as the platform in
which the submission is presented.
Other submission guidelines can be found at sonicstudies.org/guidelines.
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