Results 211 to 220 of about 326,932 (263)
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Listening to the archive: Historical geographies of sound
Geography Compass, 2021AbstractSound is a fundamental dimension of human experience. However, its ephemeral nature poses specific challenges to historical geographers and other scholars concerned with the study of the past. The last two decades have nonetheless witnessed an increased interest in the spatialities of historical sounds and acoustic environments in geography and
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Shapes and sounds as self-objects in learning geography
Child Psychiatry & Human Development, 1978The pleasure which some children find in maps and map reading is manifold in origin. Children cathect patterns of configuration and color and derive joy from the visual mastery of these. This gratification is enhanced by the child's knowledge that the map represents something bigger than and external to itself.
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Sound society and the geography of popular music
Continuum, 2011Ola Johansson and Thomas L. Bell, Farnham, Ashgate, 2009, 320 pp., US$99.95 (hardcover), ISBN 978-0-7546-7577-8 In Sound Society and the Geography of Popular Music Ola Johansson and Thomas Bell bri...
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Health geographies of art, music and sound
2018Research in cultural geography uses a range of modalities to tease apart the entangled, embodied and heterogeneous relationships that are fundamental to the constitution of place, identity and subjectivity. This chapter considers how such modalities are shaped by and expressed through the geographies of art and music and their role in human health in ...
Boyd, Candice P., Duffy, Michelle
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2019
This collection brings together the work of scholars from around the world who contribute to the ongoing efforts across the field of sound studies and auditory culture to theorize the more-than-representational role of sound and music in assembling various forms of social life: in the forming of communities and places of belonging, in habitual bodily ...
Doughty, Karolina, Duffy, M., Harada, T.
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This collection brings together the work of scholars from around the world who contribute to the ongoing efforts across the field of sound studies and auditory culture to theorize the more-than-representational role of sound and music in assembling various forms of social life: in the forming of communities and places of belonging, in habitual bodily ...
Doughty, Karolina, Duffy, M., Harada, T.
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‘Feeling the range’: Emotional geographies of sound in prisons
Emotion, Space and Society, 2016Abstract Sound, as a modality of emotion, is central to the everyday constitution of space. For an increasing population in Canada, however, incarceration forms the basis of everyday life. This paper explores the connections between sound and emotion as they play out in the under-researched context of prisons. I use a participant’s term, “feeling the
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The Sounds of People and Places: Readings in the Geography of American Folk and Popular Music
American Music, 1988The new edition of this popular classroom anthology brings together the best recent essays by distinguished geographers on region, music and their interrelatedness. While emphasizing the regional nature of American music, the book introduces geographical concepts such as location factors, spatial organization, distribution, and diffusion.
Norm Cohen, George O. Carney
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The world is sound? Geography, musicology and British‐Asian soundscapes
Area, 2005This paper contributes to recent geographical engagements with sound and music by exploring the benefits of a geographical approach conversant with musicological and ethnomusicological tools and agendas within a specific political and empirical context: British‐Asian cultural politics and contemporary dance music. Doing so, it suggests, sheds new light
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