On behalf of Antonio Marazzi
Dear All,
As you may know, the IUAES Inter-Congress, jointly organized with the Canadian CASCA, will take place in Ottawa ( 2-7 May 2017).
It will include the panel AURAL ANTHROPOLOGY, in the stream Moving bodies: sounds and resonance, now open to paper submissions ( deadline December 19, 2016). You are warmly invited to submit your paper proposal at:
http://nomadit.co.uk/cascaiuaes2017/en/call-for-papers
Conference website: http://nomadit.co.uk/cascaiuaes2017/en/index
Please direct CASCA/IUAES2017 inquiries to [log in to unmask]
Below you will find the abstract of the panel. As you will see, the focus is on sounds and soundscapes in an attempt to form a new subdiscipline in anthropology, in a dialogue among various approaches and research fields. For this purpose, we encourage presentations in both written and acoustic forms, and we will ask the congress organizers to make sounds reproductions possible at our panel.
AURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
We are proposing a new subdiscipline in anthropology, along the recent focus on the senses, dealing with hearing and its importance in various environmental and cultural situations. While perception and production of images have given rise to visual anthropology, aural perception has given rise to separate fields, such as the transference from orality to written scholarly texts, or the registration and interpretation of soundscapes, both natural and man-made; and above all, ethnomusicology. Bur ears are what makes humans able to speak, and cultural meanings of noises are often neglected in fieldwork. Ears control our movements, providing the necessary equilibrium for walking and dancing, under various forms of cultural control. The dividing line between noises and harmonious sounds is also culturally defined, while all kinds of natural sounds are variously classified and interpreted. The contributions of ethnomusicologists and anthropologists in the field are rich (Feld, Seeger, Carpitella), but what seems to be needed is an encompassing framework bringing together such a variety under the common role of our sound perception. Ferdinand De Saussure, the founder of structuralist linguistics, due to have a strong influence in anthropology, started his analysis on what he called ‘image acoustique’ (acoustic image), later defined as the ‘signifiant’. What the proposed Aural Anthropology is trying to achieve is an expansion of this approach to all possible perceptions and expressions of sounds and their cultural interpretations.
In the proposed panel we encourage presentations bringing together sounds and written comments, along with written papers.
Please, feel free to ask us directly any further informations.
Antonio Marazzi
University of Padua, Italy
Former Chairman of the IUAES Commmission on Visual Anthropology
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Francesco Spagna
University of Padua, Italy
Cultural Anthropologist
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