The modern history of disability, and of speech impediments in particular, has largely been written as one of medical discourse and (more recently) of social and cultural imaginations. The pathology of speech appears as an embodied, but ultimately intangible, issue due to the transient nature of sound itself. Once produced, it disappears, and seems to escape memory. In this text, stammering is approached as an object of material history. Drawing on the “paper trail” left by medical experts, popular entertainers and a handful of stammerers’ experiences, this paper examines the ways in which stammering was made material in the nineteenth century. The impediment not only provided (pseudo) medical actors with a lucrative market for various cura...
This dissertation examines the intellectual and cultural reception of the phonograph at the turn of ...
In late 1877 Thomas Edison cobbled together a crude mechanism of metal and wood he called the “phono...
Musical performance can never be fully understood through texts of music or language. If music can b...
The modern history of disability, and of speech impediments in particular, has largely been written ...
The modern history of disability, and of speech impediments in particular, has largely been written...
Throughout the nineteenth century, knowledge about stammering and its possible cures changed conside...
Soundsinging is one name for the practice of making music using an idiosyncratic palette of vocal an...
Disability is often conceptualized in visual terms: its historical presence is imagined as a paradox...
This dissertation argues that issues of vocal disability are crucial for understanding the literary ...
This article explores the rhetorical context for early spoken sound recordings, placing them in the ...
This dissertation argues that issues of vocal disability are crucial for understanding the literary ...
This article strives to examine the historical narrative of music recording in its acoustic era (fro...
The traditional history of sound is the history of musical instruments, the anatomy of vocal and hea...
The phrase ‘historically-informed’ is a badge (usually self-awarded) worn by many musicians who perf...
Listening to music found a new context during the early nineteenth century, in the shape of large, c...
This dissertation examines the intellectual and cultural reception of the phonograph at the turn of ...
In late 1877 Thomas Edison cobbled together a crude mechanism of metal and wood he called the “phono...
Musical performance can never be fully understood through texts of music or language. If music can b...
The modern history of disability, and of speech impediments in particular, has largely been written ...
The modern history of disability, and of speech impediments in particular, has largely been written...
Throughout the nineteenth century, knowledge about stammering and its possible cures changed conside...
Soundsinging is one name for the practice of making music using an idiosyncratic palette of vocal an...
Disability is often conceptualized in visual terms: its historical presence is imagined as a paradox...
This dissertation argues that issues of vocal disability are crucial for understanding the literary ...
This article explores the rhetorical context for early spoken sound recordings, placing them in the ...
This dissertation argues that issues of vocal disability are crucial for understanding the literary ...
This article strives to examine the historical narrative of music recording in its acoustic era (fro...
The traditional history of sound is the history of musical instruments, the anatomy of vocal and hea...
The phrase ‘historically-informed’ is a badge (usually self-awarded) worn by many musicians who perf...
Listening to music found a new context during the early nineteenth century, in the shape of large, c...
This dissertation examines the intellectual and cultural reception of the phonograph at the turn of ...
In late 1877 Thomas Edison cobbled together a crude mechanism of metal and wood he called the “phono...
Musical performance can never be fully understood through texts of music or language. If music can b...