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‘Nothing to practice’: Julius Eastman, queer composition, and Black sonic geographies

cultural geographies, 2021
I trace the musical performances and life of Black, queer composer Julius Eastman, considering Eastman’s oeuvre as a heterotopia defined by both revolutionary freedom and tragic capture. Eastman lived on the margins of 1970s and 1980s avant-garde minimalist music scenes unable and unwilling to comport to white norms of esthetic innovation and cultural
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Sonic City: The Evolving Economic Geography of the Music Industry

Journal of Planning Education and Research, 2009
Our research tracks the location of musicians and music establishments in U.S. regions from 1970 to 2004. We find that the music industry has become significantly more concentrated over time. New York and Los Angeles remain dominant locations, with Nashville emerging as a third major center.
Richard Florida, Scott Jackson
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A sonic geography of voice

Progress in Human Geography, 2011
This paper seeks to extend disciplinary investigation by calling for a geography of voice and a politics of speaking and of listening. It explores the different characteristics of voices, their affective and ethico-political forces, and how they make public spaces.
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Sonic geography in a nature region

Social & Cultural Geography, 2005
This paper considers the sonic geography of a region since the late nineteenth century, taking material from the Norfolk Broads, a wetland region in eastern England. This area has been defined through competing cultures of nature and leisure, with the presence, absence and nature of sound a key concern.
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Sonic geographies: Themes, concepts, and deaf spots

Geography Compass, 2018
Abstract This article poses a straightforward question: What has geography been listening to? Sonic geographies have been established as a relevant subfield in Human Geography in the last decades. During this period, a significant amount of work has been published, but there are still few reviews of these works, and most of them focus
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Negative Research: Sonic Methods in Geography and Their Limits

The Professional Geographer, 2019
Sound has received much attention from human geographers in recent years. This article opens a debate around the growing body of work on sound as a research method.
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Sonic methodologies for more-than-human geographies: the politics of listening in a traditional slaughterhouse in the UK

cultural geographies, 2023
Sound is an established parameter in animal welfare studies. A sonic ethnographic study of a traditional slaughterhouse in south-west England reveals how animal welfare, conceived as ‘respect for the animal’ at slaughter, is based on sonically attuned practices.
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Towards a Malayan Indian sonic geography: Sound and social relations in colonial Singapore

Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 2015
From the mid-1920s, Indian music scenes developed in Singapore that were not just about the construction of regional and religious forms of Indian diasporic belonging. Drawing upon European, Chinese and Malay influences (musical and otherwise), and performing in contexts that were uncommon in India, Singaporean Indian musicians contributed to non ...
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Sonic geography, place and race in the formation of local identity: liverpool and scousers

Geografiska Annaler: Series B, Human Geography, 2010
The concept of identity has attracted significant academic attention. This article unpacks what constitutes the Scouse identity, how it is constructed and its different dimensions, with particular ...
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