Dylan Robinson's Hungry Listening: Resonant Theory for Indigenous Sound Studies emerges from encounters between Indigenous sound performance and Western art music. The book takes aim at the pernicious tendency for the latter to insist upon aesthetic assimilation as the end-goal of these encounters, which far too often means derogating the former’s ontologies and protocols of song. In this dialogue-review, members from the The Culture and Technology Discussion and Working Group (The CATDAWG) situate the book within sound studies and critiques of settler colonial listening, reflecting on the major conceptual contributions of the book such as sensate sovereignty, hungry listening, and critical listening positionality
In Red Skin, White Masks Glen Sean Coulthard speaks to the asymmetries that plague state-driven atte...
Despite vocal opposition from the indigenous people, public hearing processes in Canada play an impo...
Voice has typically been understood as an external representation of an internal uniqueness or indiv...
Dylan Robinson's Hungry Listening: Resonant Theory for Indigenous Sound Studies emerges from encount...
no abstract --- JSTOR link to article (restricted access) https://www.jstor.org/stable/2709534
This dissertation unfolds from three premises: that listening is a relational act, something that ta...
In this dissertation I consider how listening to music produced by Indigenous peoples might convince...
In this thesis and through my creative practice I argue for a situated listening that draws upon the...
Listening… can involve the listener in an intense, efficacious, and complex set of communicat...
Listening requires intensified concentration and attentiveness toward what one is listening to; link...
The practice of listening is one that has been receiving increasing attention from a number of disci...
In 2019, Stó:lō writer and scholar Dylan Robinson, and Tlingit curator and artist Candice Hopkins,cr...
This piece is based around a discussion between Peggy Kyoungwon Lee, Pedro Oliveira, Shanti Suki Osm...
"Sixteen Indigenous voices convene to consider some of the most burning questions surrounding this f...
Can sound be perceived independently of its social dimension? Or is it always embedded in a discursi...
In Red Skin, White Masks Glen Sean Coulthard speaks to the asymmetries that plague state-driven atte...
Despite vocal opposition from the indigenous people, public hearing processes in Canada play an impo...
Voice has typically been understood as an external representation of an internal uniqueness or indiv...
Dylan Robinson's Hungry Listening: Resonant Theory for Indigenous Sound Studies emerges from encount...
no abstract --- JSTOR link to article (restricted access) https://www.jstor.org/stable/2709534
This dissertation unfolds from three premises: that listening is a relational act, something that ta...
In this dissertation I consider how listening to music produced by Indigenous peoples might convince...
In this thesis and through my creative practice I argue for a situated listening that draws upon the...
Listening… can involve the listener in an intense, efficacious, and complex set of communicat...
Listening requires intensified concentration and attentiveness toward what one is listening to; link...
The practice of listening is one that has been receiving increasing attention from a number of disci...
In 2019, Stó:lō writer and scholar Dylan Robinson, and Tlingit curator and artist Candice Hopkins,cr...
This piece is based around a discussion between Peggy Kyoungwon Lee, Pedro Oliveira, Shanti Suki Osm...
"Sixteen Indigenous voices convene to consider some of the most burning questions surrounding this f...
Can sound be perceived independently of its social dimension? Or is it always embedded in a discursi...
In Red Skin, White Masks Glen Sean Coulthard speaks to the asymmetries that plague state-driven atte...
Despite vocal opposition from the indigenous people, public hearing processes in Canada play an impo...
Voice has typically been understood as an external representation of an internal uniqueness or indiv...