Results 311 to 320 of about 2,549,084 (380)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
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
Veronica della Dora
openaire +3 more sources
Sound Escape: sonic geography remembered and imagined
Ellen Waterman
semanticscholar +4 more sources
Towards a Malayan Indian sonic geography: Sound and social relations in colonial Singapore
Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 2015From 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 ...
Jim Sykes
openaire +3 more sources
Sounding Out Borderscapes: A Sonic Geography of the US–Mexico Border at Otay Mountain, California
Geopolitics, 2023This article presents a sonic, more-than-human geography of the US–Mexico borderlands. I draw on creative practice to make an empirical contribution to critical border studies.
Jared D. Margulies
semanticscholar +1 more source
Sound and the city: rethinking spatial epistemologies with urban sound maps
Sound Studies, 2021Urban sound maps are audio-visual representations of cities created by associating sounds and urban landmarks on a digital geographic map. Fusing cartography and audio recording, urban sound maps prompt a rethinking of how notions of places and spaces ...
Hadar Levy-Landesberg
semanticscholar +1 more source
Sound, Society and the Geography of Popular Music
2016Ola Johansson, Thomas L. Bell
openaire +2 more sources
Negative Research: Sonic Methods in Geography and Their Limits
Professional Geographer, 2020Sound 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.
Key MacFarlane
semanticscholar +1 more source
International Journal of Computer and Information System (IJCIS), 2023
Augmented Reality (AR) and Virtual Reality (VR) are the latest technologies that provide a new color to the field of education. This study reviews the use of AR and VR in education, especially in the teaching and learning process.
Tira Nur Fitria
semanticscholar +1 more source
Augmented Reality (AR) and Virtual Reality (VR) are the latest technologies that provide a new color to the field of education. This study reviews the use of AR and VR in education, especially in the teaching and learning process.
Tira Nur Fitria
semanticscholar +1 more source
Co-evolution in contemporary economic geography: towards a theoretical framework
Regional studies, 2018Although co-evolution is a key concept in contemporary economic geography because of its relevance for achieving deep contextualization and sound policy recommendations, it has not largely been taken up in recent empirical work. This is partly due to the
Huiwen Gong, R. Hassink
semanticscholar +1 more source
Progress in Human Geography, 2023
Sound is always present in exercises of police power, whether produced through sonic weaponry, routinized interventions into social life, or contributions to everyday soundscapes.
Nick Lally
semanticscholar +1 more source
Sound is always present in exercises of police power, whether produced through sonic weaponry, routinized interventions into social life, or contributions to everyday soundscapes.
Nick Lally
semanticscholar +1 more source