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[ecrea] CfP: Inter-Noise session on Soundscapes from a Humanities/Arts Perspective
Wed Oct 10 07:29:24 GMT 2018
Call for Papers | Inter-Noise session on Soundscapes from a
Humanities/Arts Perspective
INTER-NOISE 2019 Madrid June 16-19
Session 13.08: Soundscapes from a Humanities/Arts Perspective
/Session organized by Marcel Cobussen (Leiden University, NL) and
Vincent Meelberg (Radboud University, NL)/
The reduction of unwanted sounds in public spaces is usually equated
with noise abatement measures and traditionally expressed in decibels.
The more dB(A) a particular measure is able to suppress, the more
efficient this measure is considered to be. While suppression indeed can
be an effective way to deal with unwanted sounds, research makes clear
that the volume is not always the main cause of noise pollution.
Specific frequencies and/or vibrations with a limited amount of dB(A)
can also have a significant influence on how people experience a public
sonic atmosphere. At the same time, loud soundscanmask other, more
irritating ones and thus have a positive influence on the way a specific
space is encountered.
Besides the direct physical influence of sound on the well-being of
living creatures, sound also plays an important role on a
socio-political and even ethical level. Important issues are: who or
what is producing a sound? Can (annoying) sounds in public spaces
somehow be controlled, managed, or manipulated? Who is appropriating a
specific public space through sound and who is – sonically, socially or
otherwise – excluded? Who controls and determines the sonic atmosphere
of a public space? When can unwanted sounds be heard? What are the
expectations concerning the sonic atmosphere that listeners have?
In other words, non-acoustic variables should be taken into account too
when evaluating a sonic environment: personal characteristics and
circumstances (sound sensitivity, attitudes, expectations), situational
aspects (the number of sound sources, the presence or absence of silent
spaces), and contextual variables (how authorities react to possible
complaints).
This session is organized as a spatial-temporal event where presenters
and audience can discuss the complexity of analyzing and (re)designing a
sonic environment. Potential topics may include but are not restricted to:
-Rethinking noise
-The socio-political dimensions of sonic spaces
-The role of sound art in transforming a sonic space
-Affective tonalities
-Sonic commons
-The ethics of sound
-The policy of frequency and vibrational forces (including infra- and
ultrasound)
All abstracts (max. 500 words) for this session must be send as either a
Word file or a PDF to (noise /at/ sonicstudies.org)
<mailto:(noise /at/ sonicstudies.org)>. Deadline for abstract submission is
November 15, 2018. Abstract acceptance notice will be sent to the
authors by the end of December 2018 via e-mail.
The congress fees (including 21% VAT):
- Early Full Delegate: 575,00 EUR
- Early Student: 180,00 EUR
- Accompanying Persons: 150,00 EUR
- Extra Paper: 100,00 EUR
Important deadlines:
-Abstract submission Deadline by November 15, 2018 (which must be send
to noise@sonicstudies .org!)
-Manuscript Submission Deadline by March 1, 2019
-Early Registration Deadline May 15, 2019
For further information please visit the congress website:
www.internoise2019.org <http://www.internoise2019.org/>
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