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Sounding Out!

pushing sound studies into the red since 2009
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ArticleAudiobook ForumAudiobooksLiteratureRecordingMedia and Communications
Published
Author Shantam Goyal

For many, the audiobook is a source of pleasure and distraction, a way to get through the To Read Pile while washing dishes or commuting. Audiobooks have a stealthy way of rendering invisible the labor of creating this aural experience: the writer, the narrator, the producer, the technology…here at Sounding Out! we want to render that labor visible and, moreover, think of the sound as a focus of analysis in itself.

ArticleCultural StudiesDiasporic SoundDigital MediaIdentityMedia and Communications
Published
Author guestlistener

SO! Amplifies. . .a highly-curated, rolling mini-post series by which we editors hip you to cultural makers and organizations doing work we really really dig.  You’re welcome! — Marginalized Sound is an online radio station that will launch in late 2020.

ArticleCultural StudiesGenderMusicMusic VideosMedia and Communications
Published
Author justindburton

Christmas pop songs tend to revolve around just a few basic topics: 1) Jesus, 2) Santa, 3) Did you notice it’s winter?, and 4) Love. These aren’t mutually exclusive categories, of course.

Editorial CollectiveSound StudiesTop TenMedia and Communications
Published
Author j.l. stoever

For your end-of-the year reading pleasure, here are the Top Ten Posts of 2019 (according to views as of 12/4/19). Visit this brilliance today–and often! Listen out for us in 2020!

IdentityNext Gen Sound StudiesPodcastSound StudiesUrban SpaceMedia and Communications
Published
Author sceraso

Welcome to Next Gen sound studies! Here, you will be treated to the future. . . today! In this series, we will share excellent work from undergraduates, along with the pedagogy that inspired them. You’ll read voice biographies (Kaitlyn Liu’s “My Voice, or On Not Staying Quiet,”) check out blog assignments (David Lee’s “Mukbang Cooks, Chews, and Heals”), listen to podcasts (Nic John Ramos and Laura Garbes hosting SO!

ArticleAsian And Asian American StudiesCultural StudiesFoodInternetsMedia and Communications
Published
Author davdlee

Welcome to Next Gen sound studies! In the month of November, you will be treated to the future. . . today! In this series, we will share excellent work from undergraduates, along with the pedagogy that inspired them. You’ll read voice biographies, check out blog assignments, listen to podcasts, and read detailed histories that will inspire and invigorate. Bet.

ArticleAsian And Asian American StudiesGenderIdentityMemoirMedia and Communications
Published
Author kaitlynliu

Welcome to Next Gen sound studies! In the month of November, you will be treated to the future. . . today! In this series, we will share excellent work from undergraduates, along with the pedagogy that inspired them. You’ll read voice biographies, check out blog assignments, listen to podcasts, and read detailed histories that will inspire and invigorate. Bet.

ArticleConferencesGenderImprovisationListeningMedia and Communications
Published
Author guestlistener

I begin this essay with an apology, addressed to the Society for Ethnomusicology President Gregory Barz: Because my intervention arose so quickly and unpredictably—for readers outside of the Society for Ethnomusicology who may not know, I stood up and yelled “You’re a hypocrite!” then left the meeting—it seems worthwhile to explore my actions in a more thoughtful space of written discourse.

American StudiesCritical Prison StudiesDigital MediaMusicRecordingMedia and Communications
Published
Author guestlistener

. SO! Amplifies. . .a highly-curated, rolling mini-post series by which we editors hip you to cultural makers and organizations doing work we really really dig.  You’re welcome! — Die Jim Crow (DJC) is the first US record label dedicated to recording formerly and currently incarcerated musicians.

American StudiesArticleCultural StudiesEconomicsEDMMedia and Communications
Published
Author Dan DiPiero

As pundits increasingly speculate about the likelihood and character of another recession, I’m thinking about the one from which we’re still recovering. Specifically, I’m thinking about a certain strain of American pop music—or a certain sentiment within pop music—that it seems to me accelerated and concentrated just after the 2008 financial collapse.