
Resistant Practices in Communities of Sound
McGill-Queen's University Press
Published on 2. July 2024
Book
Hardback
396 pages
978-0-2280-2121-6 (ISBN)
Description
Print - and by extension, visuality - has historically dominated the literary, artistic, and academic spheres in Canada; however, scholars and artists have become increasingly attuned to the creative and scholarly opportunities offered by paying attention to sound.
Resistant Practices in Communities of Sound turns to a particular opportunity, interrogating the ways that sonic practices act as forms of aesthetic and political dissent. Chapters explore, on the one hand, critical methods of engaging with sound - particularly bodies of literary and artistic work in their specific materiality as read, recited, performed, mediated, archived, and remixed objects; on the other hand, they also engage with creative practices that mobilize sound as a political aesthetic, taking on questions of identity, racialization, ability, mobility, and surveillance. Divided into nine pairings that bring together works originating in oral/aural forms with works originating in writing, the book explores the creative and critical output of leading sonic practitioners. It showcases diverse approaches to the equally complex formations of sound, resistance, and community, bridging the too-often separate worlds of the practical and the academic in generative, resonant dialogue.
Combining the oral and the written, the creative and the critical, and the mediated and the live, Resistant Practices in Communities of Sound asks us to attune ourselves as listeners as well as readers.
Resistant Practices in Communities of Sound turns to a particular opportunity, interrogating the ways that sonic practices act as forms of aesthetic and political dissent. Chapters explore, on the one hand, critical methods of engaging with sound - particularly bodies of literary and artistic work in their specific materiality as read, recited, performed, mediated, archived, and remixed objects; on the other hand, they also engage with creative practices that mobilize sound as a political aesthetic, taking on questions of identity, racialization, ability, mobility, and surveillance. Divided into nine pairings that bring together works originating in oral/aural forms with works originating in writing, the book explores the creative and critical output of leading sonic practitioners. It showcases diverse approaches to the equally complex formations of sound, resistance, and community, bridging the too-often separate worlds of the practical and the academic in generative, resonant dialogue.
Combining the oral and the written, the creative and the critical, and the mediated and the live, Resistant Practices in Communities of Sound asks us to attune ourselves as listeners as well as readers.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Montreal
Canada
Illustrations
21 figures
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-2280-2121-6 (9780228021216)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Deanna Fong | Cole Mash
Resistant Practices in Communities of Sound
E-Book
07/2024
1st Edition
McGill-Queen's University Press
€67.99
Available for download

Deanna Fong | Cole Mash
Resistant Practices in Communities of Sound
E-Book
07/2024
1st Edition
McGill-Queen's University Press
€67.99
Available for download
Persons
Deanna Fong is the literary editor of the Vancouver-based art and literary journal The Capilano Review.
Cole Mash is a poet, scholar, and community arts organizer from Syilx/Okanagan territory in Kelowna, BC.
Cole Mash is a poet, scholar, and community arts organizer from Syilx/Okanagan territory in Kelowna, BC.