This article is about the use of audio media in researching places, which I term ‘audio geography’. The article narrates some episodes from the production of an ‘audio drift’, an experimental environmental sound work designed to be listened to on a portable MP3 player whilst walking in a ruinous landscape. Reflecting on how this work functions, I argue that, as well as representing places, audio geography can shape listeners’ attention and bodily movements, thereby reworking places, albeit temporarily. I suggest that audio geography is particularly apt for amplifying the haunted and uncanny qualities of places. I discuss some of the issues raised for research ethics, epistemology and spectral geographies
Societies are often required to react to extreme events that arise through either anthropogenic or n...
The bicentenary of the 1817 Pentrich Revolution provided an opportunity for the composition of a ser...
This paper concerns the spatial functions of field recordings, defined as audio recordings of the m...
This article is about the use of audio media in researching places, which I term ‘audio geography’. ...
This article is about the use of audio media in researching places, which I term ‘audio geography’. ...
This paper argues for expanded listening in geography. Expanded listening addresses how bodies of al...
This paper investigates how sound produces and transforms space and place as it moves and travels. I...
This article is concerned with the history and practice of creating sound walks or ‘memoryscapes’: o...
This paper addresses how we might access, understand and analyse the sounds of a landscape that are ...
The objective of this article is to approach the different conceptions of sound – and its relations ...
The study of soundscapes encourages geographers to hear the world, paying attention to the diversity...
Stolen Voices is a research enquiry that uses listening as both methodology and material. Stolen Voi...
This article reflects on the authors’ work in investigating how audiovisual practices might represen...
Research into sound—including both musical and nonmusical sound—amounts to a varied body of work tha...
Societies are often required to react to extreme events that arise through either anthropogenic or n...
The bicentenary of the 1817 Pentrich Revolution provided an opportunity for the composition of a ser...
This paper concerns the spatial functions of field recordings, defined as audio recordings of the m...
This article is about the use of audio media in researching places, which I term ‘audio geography’. ...
This article is about the use of audio media in researching places, which I term ‘audio geography’. ...
This paper argues for expanded listening in geography. Expanded listening addresses how bodies of al...
This paper investigates how sound produces and transforms space and place as it moves and travels. I...
This article is concerned with the history and practice of creating sound walks or ‘memoryscapes’: o...
This paper addresses how we might access, understand and analyse the sounds of a landscape that are ...
The objective of this article is to approach the different conceptions of sound – and its relations ...
The study of soundscapes encourages geographers to hear the world, paying attention to the diversity...
Stolen Voices is a research enquiry that uses listening as both methodology and material. Stolen Voi...
This article reflects on the authors’ work in investigating how audiovisual practices might represen...
Research into sound—including both musical and nonmusical sound—amounts to a varied body of work tha...
Societies are often required to react to extreme events that arise through either anthropogenic or n...
The bicentenary of the 1817 Pentrich Revolution provided an opportunity for the composition of a ser...
This paper concerns the spatial functions of field recordings, defined as audio recordings of the m...