This article examines the 1935 Science Museum temporary exhibition on Noise Abatement, situating it in the sound historical context of inter-war Britain, and making an argument that the ‘way of hearing’ it advanced was part of an attempt to shape auditory perception in the interests of a class-bound culture of acoustic civilization. Further, the article uses this exhibition to mount an argument that museum scholars should consider sound not simply as a medium of engagement, but also as a politically interested and socially active field
This article explores the ways that audio in the home was figured in (and helped shape) changing con...
© 2017 Taylor & Francis. The past 20 years have witnessed a turn towards the sensuous, particular...
No abstractThis article attempts to examine the socio-cultural significance of sound and of acoustic...
This article traces sound as it echoes through approaches to displaying the Science Museum’s acousti...
In the twenty-first century, museums are in the midst of a paradigm shift. Digital revolution has in...
New technologies profoundly change our sonic surroundings, the world's soundscape. However, research...
Using an interdisciplinary approach, this article analyses the uses of sound and silence in three Po...
Between March 2013 and November 2014, the Amsterdam Museum had an installation that enabled visitors...
As museums continue to search for new ways to attract visitors, recent trends within museum practice...
The thesis proposes the use of listening as a method of unfolding material relationships between tim...
This article advocates that we should understand the sound history as a new way of investigating gen...
The paper, in the international peer reviewed journal Organised Sound (CUP), documents and discusses...
© 2017 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois. All rights reserved. Sound transforme...
This article explores the ways that audio in the home was figured in (and helped shape) changing con...
© 2017 Taylor & Francis. The past 20 years have witnessed a turn towards the sensuous, particular...
No abstractThis article attempts to examine the socio-cultural significance of sound and of acoustic...
This article traces sound as it echoes through approaches to displaying the Science Museum’s acousti...
In the twenty-first century, museums are in the midst of a paradigm shift. Digital revolution has in...
New technologies profoundly change our sonic surroundings, the world's soundscape. However, research...
Using an interdisciplinary approach, this article analyses the uses of sound and silence in three Po...
Between March 2013 and November 2014, the Amsterdam Museum had an installation that enabled visitors...
As museums continue to search for new ways to attract visitors, recent trends within museum practice...
The thesis proposes the use of listening as a method of unfolding material relationships between tim...
This article advocates that we should understand the sound history as a new way of investigating gen...
The paper, in the international peer reviewed journal Organised Sound (CUP), documents and discusses...
© 2017 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois. All rights reserved. Sound transforme...
This article explores the ways that audio in the home was figured in (and helped shape) changing con...
© 2017 Taylor & Francis. The past 20 years have witnessed a turn towards the sensuous, particular...
No abstractThis article attempts to examine the socio-cultural significance of sound and of acoustic...