In Pursuit of Sound: An Interdisciplinary Symposium
1 – 2 October 2019
Our keynote speeches will be given by Dr. Mina Gorji (University of Cambridge), and Dr. Tom Rice (University of Exeter). The symposium will also host a performance.
In Pursuit of Sound is a two day symposium which aims to
rally researchers engaged in sound studies, and interrogate the discipline’s
promises and pitfalls. The humanities’ ‘aural turn’ might be said to have been
completed, but we are interested in advancing sound studies towards new,
strange, and challenging inquiries. To that end, we invite proposals for twenty
minute papers on the theme of sound, from postgraduates, ECRs, and academics
across the humanities.
Proposals might address the following topics, although these are not exhaustive:
- Crowds, rallies and speeches
- Sound on Social Media
- Sound and Noise in Cinema
- Quietism, Quakerism and Silence
- Headphones and Acoustic Technology
- Lyric Voice and Noisy Poetry
- Prisons and Penal Conditions
- Soundproofing
- Clairaudience
- Hearing Things and Imaginary Sound
- Reading and Subvocalisation
- City Space / Country Space
- Enclosure / the Extension of the Auditory
- The Sounds of the Anthropocene
- Listening (in) and Surveillance
- Deafness
Registration is free, and a limited number of travel
bursaries will be available.
Organisers: Jamie Fenton (Faculty of English), Syamala
Roberts (Faculty of Modern and Medieval Languages) and Luke Warde (Faculty of
Modern and Medieval Languages)
This symposium is supported by the Cambridge AHRC ColloquiaFund.
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