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Decolonizing Ear: Documentary Film Disrupts the Archive [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 232 pages, height x width x depth: 234x152x25 mm, weight: 460 g, 12 b&w illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Nov-2022
  • Izdevniecība: University of Toronto Press
  • ISBN-10: 1487544855
  • ISBN-13: 9781487544850
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 63,82 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 232 pages, height x width x depth: 234x152x25 mm, weight: 460 g, 12 b&w illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 09-Nov-2022
  • Izdevniecība: University of Toronto Press
  • ISBN-10: 1487544855
  • ISBN-13: 9781487544850
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

A Decolonizing Ear investigates how documentary film can challenge conventions of listening and recording shaped by histories of colonial ethnography and extraction.



The recording of Indigenous voices is one of the most well-known methods of colonial ethnography. In A Decolonizing Ear, Olivia Landry offers a sceptical account of listening as a highly mediated and extractive act, influenced by technology and ideology. Returning to early ethnographic practices of voice recording and archiving at the turn of the twentieth century, with a particular focus on the German paradigm, she reveals the entanglement of listening in the logic of Euro-American empire and the ways in which contemporary films can destabilize the history of colonial sound reproduction.

Landry provides close readings of several disparate documentary films from the late 1990s and the early 2000s. The book pays attention to technology and knowledge production to examine how these films employ recordings plucked from different colonial sound archives and disrupt their purposes. Drawing on film and documentary studies, sound studies, German studies, archival studies, postcolonial studies, and media history, A Decolonizing Ear develops a method of decolonizing listening from the insights provided by the films themselves.

Introduction: The Phonograph on Film

1. Colonial Listening and the Making of a Sound Archive

2. Decolonial Listening: A Methodology in Three Parts

3. The Noise of Decolonial Listening: From Here to Here and The Halfmoon
Files

4. (Re-)Sounding Autoethnography in Marlon Fuentess Bontoc Eulogy

5. Weird Objects and Disembodied Voices: Audio Evangelism in The Tailenders

Conclusion: Sinister Listening and Its Afterlives
Olivia Landry is an assistant professor of German at Lehigh University.