
Overview
- Proposes models for understanding the relationships between sound and place in Brazil and Cuba
- Offers interdisciplinary perspectives that call upon examples from music, cinema, medical criminology, experimental phonetics, literature, and journalism
- Presents materials otherwise unavailable to English-language readers
Access this book
Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout
Other ways to access
About this book
Audible Geographies in Latin America examines the audibility of place as a racialized phenomenon. It argues that place is not just a geographical or political notion, but also a sensorial one, shaped by the specific profile of the senses engaged through different media. Through a series of cases, the book examines racialized listening criteria and practices in the formation of ideas about place at exemplary moments between the 1890s and the 1960s. Through a discussion of Louis Moreau Gottschalk’s last concerts in Rio de Janeiro, and a contemporary sound installation involving telegraphs by Otávio Schipper and Sérgio Krakowski, Chapter 1 proposes a link between a sensorial economy and a political economy for which the racialized and commodified body serves as an essential feature of its operation. Chapter 2 analyzes resonance as a racialized concept through an examination of phonograph demonstrations in Rio de Janeiro and research on dancing manias and hypnosis in Salvador da Bahia in the 1890s. Chapter 3 studies voice and speech as racialized movements, informed by criminology and the proscriptive norms defining “white” Spanish in Cuba. Chapter 4 unpacks conflicting listening criteria for an optics of blackness in “national” sounds, developed according to a gendered set of premises that moved freely between diaspora and empire, national territory and the fraught politics of recorded versus performed music in the early 1930s. Chapter 5, in the context of Cuban Revolutionary cinema of the 1960s, explores the different facets of noise—both as a racialized and socially relevant sense of sound and as a feature and consequence of different reproduction and transmission technologies. Overall, the book argues that these and related instances reveal how sound and listening have played more prominent roles than previously acknowledged in place-making in the specific multi-ethnic, colonial contexts characterized by diasporic populations in Latin America and theCaribbean.
Similar content being viewed by others
Keywords
Table of contents (6 chapters)
Authors and Affiliations
About the author
Dylon Lamar Robbins is Assistant Professor of Spanish and Portuguese at New York University, USA. He has published on Brazilian and Cuban cinema and music, the documentary and materiality, polyrhythm and temporality, spirit possession and political subjectivity, torture, pornography, cannibalism, and anthropophagy, as well as on visual culture and war in the United States in 1898.
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Audible Geographies in Latin America
Book Subtitle: Sounds of Race and Place
Authors: Dylon Lamar Robbins
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-10558-7
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan Cham
eBook Packages: Literature, Cultural and Media Studies, Literature, Cultural and Media Studies (R0)
Copyright Information: The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2019
Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-030-10557-0Published: 08 October 2019
eBook ISBN: 978-3-030-10558-7Published: 28 September 2019
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: XIX, 272
Number of Illustrations: 14 b/w illustrations, 18 illustrations in colour
Topics: Latin American Culture, Latin American History, Culture and Technology, Media and Communication, Latin American/Caribbean Literature