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john roach

Sonic experiments from Covid-19 lockdown - CRiSAP - 0 views

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    "PhD student Kate Carr has started an new podcast series 'Interiorities' playing sonic experiments and documents from this Covid-19 time of 'lockdown'. Episodes are being released each Sunday through April on Mixcloud and fortnightly from May. Sound works so far include contributions by Angus Carlyle, Leo Okagawa, Mark Peter Wright,  Salomé Voegelin, Stephanie Merchak, Margaret Harmer, Paula Garcia Stone, Iris Garrelfs, Martin Kay, Francois Houle & Scant Intone and many many more."
john roach

Frontiers | Soundscape in Times of Change: Case Study of a City Neighbourhood During th... - 0 views

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    "The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) lockdown meant a greatly reduced social and economic activity. Sound is of major importance to people's perception of the environment, and some remarked that the soundscape was changing for the better. But are these anecdotal reports based in truth? Has traffic noise from cars and airplanes really gone down, so that more birdsong can be heard? Have socially distanced people quietened down? This article presents a case study of the human perception of environmental sounds in an urban neighborhood in the Basque Country between 15 March and 25 May 2020."
john roach

soundscape - Sensory Criminology - 0 views

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    "During the Covid-19 pandemic, comparisons have often been drawn between lockdown measures and prison, yet people with lived experience of prison have countered that such domestic confinement bears little resemblance to the pains of imprisonment. These different viewpoints suggest that the general public has little understanding of what happens behind prison walls. This blogpost considers how prisoner writing can describe prison to the non-prisoner reader (i.e. a reader who does not have lived experience of prison), bearing witness to the carceral experience. Drawing on examples of short stories about prison, written by current or former prisoners, I examine how these writers recreate sensory aspects of prison in their writing. Carceral texts commonly recount the sights, sounds, touches, tastes and smells of prison; but, in my experience of reading and analysing prisoner writing, it is the depiction of prison sound that is most powerful and affecting. In this blogpost, I examine how prisoner-writers translate the speech and sounds of prison into written form, to convey the carceral experience to those outside prison walls."
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