Listening and Voice: Phenomenologies of Sound, Second EditionSUNY Press, 4 oct 2007 - 276 páginas Listening and Voice is an updated and expanded edition of Don Ihde s groundbreaking 1976 classic in the study of sound. Ranging from the experience of sound through language, music, religion, and silence, clear examples and illustrations take the reader into the important and often overlooked role of the auditory in human life. Ihde s newly added preface, introduction, and chapters extend these sound studies to the technologies of sound, including musical instrumentation, hearing aids, and the new group of scientific technologies which make infra- and ultra-sound available to human experience. |
Índice
In Praise of Sound | 3 |
Under the Signs of Husserl and Heidegger | 17 |
First Phenomenology | 25 |
The Auditory Dimension | 49 |
The Shapes of Sound | 57 |
The Auditory Field | 73 |
Timeful Sound | 85 |
Auditory Horizons | 103 |
Silence and Word | 161 |
Dramaturgical Voice | 167 |
The Face Voice and Silence | 177 |
A Phenomenology of Voice | 185 |
Auditory Imagination | 203 |
Listening | 217 |
Bach to Rock Amplification | 227 |
Jazz Embodied Instrumentation | 235 |
The Polyphony of Experience | 115 |
Auditory Imagination | 131 |
Inner Speech | 137 |
The Center of Language | 147 |
Music and Word | 155 |
Embodying Hearing Devices Digitalization | 243 |
Embodiment Technologies and Musics | 251 |
Notes | 265 |
273 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
Listening and Voice: Phenomenologies of Sound, Second Edition Don Ihde Vista previa restringida - 2012 |
Términos y frases comunes
acoustic already amplified appear attention auditorily auditory dimension auditory experience auditory field auditory imagination aware become begin bodily context copresence Democritean Descartes directionality discern distance dramaturgical voice echo echolocation Edmund Husserl electronic embodied empiricism ence epoché example existential possibilities experiential focal focus fringe Georg von Bekesy head music hear heard Heidegger hermeneutic horizon human Husserl Husserlian imaginative mode infrasound inner speech instruments language-as-word learning limits Listening and Voice located Martin Heidegger Merleau-Ponty metaphor metaphysics motion noetic noise noted object occurs P. F. Strawson perceptual phenomena phenomenon philosophy play polyphony presence question ratio recorded reduction relation remains reveals reverberation rience role saxophone second phenomenology self-presence sense shape shape-aspects significance silence sound spatial significations speak structure surrounding technologies temporal span thinking thought tion tradition Trevor Pinch turn unsaid variations vision visual field visualist voices of language voices of things word