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Sounding Out!

pushing sound studies into the red since 2009
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Editorial CollectiveSound StudiesTop TenMedia and Communications
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Author j.l. stoever

For your January reading pleasure, here are the Top Ten Posts of 2017 (according to views as of 12/28/17). Visit this brilliance today–and often!–and know more fire is coming in 2018!

Classical MusicFilm/Movies/CinemaGames/GamingMedieval SoundsSound StudiesMedia and Communications
Published
Author cooksterkc

For those familiar with modern media, there are a number of short musical phrases that immediately trigger a particular emotional response. Think, for example, of the two-note theme that denotes the shark in Jaws , and see if you become just a little more tense or nervous.

American StudiesArticleChican@/Latin@ StudiesHistoryHumanismMedia and Communications
Published
Author Erika

In the summer of 2016, optimistic about a full-time teaching position at a minority-serving institution, yet unsure about what the U.S. election would mean for immigrants’ rights, I played the Hamilton soundtrack daily. Lin Manuel Miranda wrote the Pulitzer-prize winning musical inspired by Ron Chernow’s biography on the United States’ founding father because, he believed, Alexander Hamilton’s life embodied hip hop.

American StudiesArticleChican@/Latin@ StudiesDiasporic SoundDramaMedia and Communications
Published
Author trevorboffone

In Spring 2017, I brought Houston-based playwright/performer Josh Inocéncio to my campus—the University of Houston—to perform his solo show Purple Eyes (for more on the event, see “Campus Organizing, or How I Use Theatre to Resist”). Purple Eyes is what Inocéncio calls an “ancestral auto/biographical” performance piece which explores his upbringing as a closeted gay Chicano living in the midst of the cultural heritage of

American Indian StudiesEnvironmental IssuesIndigenous StudiesPodcastSound StudiesMedia and Communications
Published
Author guestlistener

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD: Standing Rock, Protest, Sound and Power (Part 2) SUBSCRIBE TO THE SERIES VIA ITUNES ADD OUR PODCASTS TO YOUR STITCHER FAVORITES PLAYLIST Part Two of a special series on Standing Rock, Protest, Sound and Power. The guest for today’s podcast is Tracy Rector.

ArticleMusicPerformanceRadioRecordingMedia and Communications
Published
Author jbraddoc

The Firesign Theatre are the only group that can claim among its devoted fans both Thom Yorke and John Ashbery; who have an album in the National Recording Registry at the Library of Congress and also coined a phrase now used as a slogan by freeform giant WFMU;

ArticleAsian And Asian American StudiesClassCultural StudiesGenderMedia and Communications
Published
Author Ronit Ghosh

Our listening practices are discursively constructed. In the sonic landscape of India, in particular, the way in which we listen and what we hear are often normative, produced within hegemonic discourses of gender, class, caste, region, and sexuality.

ArticleAsian And Asian American StudiesFilm/Movies/CinemaGenderGendered Soundscapes Of IndiaMedia and Communications
Published
Author pjaikumar

Our listening practices are discursively constructed. In the sonic landscape of India, in particular, the way in which we listen and what we hear are often normative, produced within hegemonic discourses of gender, class, caste, region, and sexuality.

ArticleAsian And Asian American StudiesAuthenticitiesCultural StudiesDiasporic SoundMedia and Communications
Published
Author pavitrasundar

Our listening practices are discursively constructed. In the sonic landscape of India, in particular, the way in which we listen and what we hear are often normative, produced within hegemonic discourses of gender, class, caste, region, and sexuality.

Asian And Asian American StudiesClassCultural StudiesDiasporic SoundFilm/Movies/CinemaMedia and Communications
Published
Author guestlistener

**This post was co-authored by forum co-editors Praseeda Gopinath and Monika Mehta A note on the collection: Our original Call For Posts was for “Gendered Sounds of South Asia,” as we hoped to use this de-center India and explore terrain beyond cinema.

Arab/Arab American StudiesArchivalArticleAsian And Asian American StudiesCultural StudiesMedia and Communications
Published
Author clairescooley

Our listening practices are discursively constructed. In the sonic landscape of India, in particular, the way in which we listen and what we hear is often normative, produced within hegemonic discourses of gender, class, caste, region, and sexuality.