Sawt, Bodies, Species
Sonic Pluralism in Morocco
Author(s)
Aubry, Gilles
Contributor(s)
Richter, Anna (editor)
Collection
Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)Language
EnglishAbstract
How do the Moroccan sound archives of the writer Paul Bowles from the 1970s sound today with the musicians of that time? What does an earthquake in Agadir have to do with a Japanese science fiction film? What sound do stones have? And what do we learn about environmental pollution by listening to the agar agar algae?
Drawing on critical sound studies, ethnographic research, and artistic practice, this book offers multivoiced narratives about acoustic practices in Morocco. Gilles Aubry‘s research on the sonic dimensions of our environment, ranges from animal, plant, and mineral voices to ritual practices and technological infrastructures. The Arabic word for these voices in the physical but also in the technological sense is sawt. In collaborations with local musicians, artists and scientists, Aubry explores in experimental settings listening as the basis of „sonic pluralism“.
The dense descriptions of the multidisciplinary research are complemented by series of photographies. Via QR codes, the text is linked to audiovisual essays and compositions by the artist. The layout of the book takes up this close linking of digital and analog materials.
Keywords
Theory of music and musicology;Music recording and reproduction;Social research and statistics;Regional studiesDOI
10.53198/9783943253641ISBN
9783943253597, 9783943253641Publisher
adocsPublisher website
https://adocs.de/en/publisherPublication date and place
Hamburg, 2023Classification
Theory of music and musicology
Music recording and reproduction
Social research and statistics
Regional / International studies