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[Commlist] New book: Participatory Sound Art: Technologies, Aesthetics, Politics
Mon Nov 27 14:20:10 GMT 2023
Vadim Keylin is delighted to announce the publication of my book
/*Participatory Sound Art: Technologies, Aesthetics, Politics
*/(Palgrave Macmillan).
Publisher page: https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-981-99-6357-7
The book addresses a major gap in sound art scholarship: the role of
audience participation. It offers a survey of participatory sound art
from its origins in the historical avant-gardes to the
non-institutionalized forms of sonic creativity in contemporary digital
culture. In doing so, it proposes an innovative theoretical framework
for analysing such phenomena, rooted in Pragmatist aesthetics,
affordance theory and postcritique. Combining artwork analyses with
qualitative studies, it focuses on three principal aspects of
participatory sound art: the ways the materialities of the artworks
facilitate and structure the participatory processes; the interplay of
the creative agencies of the artists and the participants; and the
postcritical approach to sound art’s politics, unfolding through the
participants’ affective gestures. In considering these multiple
dimensions, this book contributes to the growing fields of sound studies
and participation studies, as well as to curatorial practice regarding
sound art and participatory art.
Until December 21, the book can be purchased with a 20% discount using
the code 2KbHh90AX1PdNT at checkout.
Endorsements:
"How exactly can listeners participate in sound art? Vadim Keylin
explores this issue within contemporary aesthetics through an impressive
series of analyses, through fieldwork, conceptual critique as well as
through reflections on epistemologies, art history and media history. He
proposes to conceptualize participatory sound art through a sonic
pragmatism that suggests a stimulating interpretation and application of
the notion of affordances in the field of sound studies. With Keylin's
approach, works of sound art become consistently recognizable as
scenarios for and of encounters."
*―Holger Schulze*, Professor of Musicology, Copenhagen University, Denmark
"It is always good to read how young, promising scholars contribute new
insights to the prevailing sound studies discourse. Vadim Keylin’s
Participatory Sound Art opens a field, a niche, within sound studies
that so far hasn’t been explored systematically, namely the relationship
between sound art and participatory art, thereby emphasizing sound art
as a participatory art. Reflecting on many interesting sound artworks
and bringing them into contact with theories grounded in pragmatism,
Keylin has managed to enrich the already impressive theories on sound
art with new concepts, new perceptions, and new approaches."
*―Marcel Cobussen*, Professor of Auditory Culture, Leiden University,
The Netherlands
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