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[Commlist] CfP: Dissonant Loves - The Conviviality of Contemporary Sound Diasporas
Sat Feb 27 18:36:17 GMT 2021
Dissonant Loves: The Conviviality of Contemporary Sound Diasporas
We are seeking contributors to an upcoming edited volume to be published
by Routledge. The contents of the book are to be framed around the
living transmission of diaspora through sound in (speech, everyday life,
media, computation, music, history) over diverse spaces and times
drawing upon cases from around the globe. The intention of the book is
not simply to map these formations but to evaluate the resources they
provide as convivial formations – in the context of reconfigured global
capitalism, augmented nationalism and racism, and sound’s uneven capture
in computation. The volume aspires to incorporate a wide range of
voices, their hopes, fears and living realities. The book will be
culturally focussed whilst not disregarding the materialities of sound.
We welcome interest from anthropologists, sociologists, geographers,
historians, ethnomusicologists, cultural theorists and others with an
interest in the multiplicity of ways in which diasporic sound cultures
are transmitted and lived. In doing so the volume will move away from a
sonic eurocentricism that until recently has dominated sonic
epistemologies and contribute to a critical re-appraisal of the role of
sound in contemporary global modernity.
We are interested in both full-length chapters (up to 8,000 words in
length) as well as shorter, more impressionistic pieces (up to 1,000
words in length) which will be interspersed throughout the volume. We
also expect to provide a website with sonic examples/podcasts to
accompany the book.
Expressions of interest, about a paragraph long, can be emailed to the
two editors of the book (M.Bull /at/ sussex.ac.uk) and
(Malcolm.James /at/ sussex.ac.uk) preferably by the end of March 2021.
Michael Bull is Professor of Sound Studies at the University of Sussex.
He is co-founder and editor of the journal Senses and Society
(Routledge), founding editor of Sound Studies: An Interdisciplinary
Journal (Routledge), series editor for the book series The Study of
Sound (Bloomsbury) and Sound in Urban and Popular Culture (Routledge).
He has recently published the monograph Sirens (Bloomsbury 2020) and has
co-edited (with Marcel Cobussen) The Bloomsbury Handbook of Sonic
Methodologies (Bloomsbury 2020).
Malcolm James is Senior Lecturer in Media and Cultural Studies, and
Associate Director of Sussex Centre for Cultural Studies at the
University of Sussex. He is author of the books Sonic Intimacy: Reggae
Sound Systems, Jungle Pirate Radio and Grime YouTube Music Videos
(Bloomsbury 2020), Urban Multiculture: Youth, Politics and Cultural
Transformation (Palgrave 2015), and co-editor of Regeneration Songs:
Sounds of Investment and Loss in East London (Repeater Books 2018).
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