Fly Free with $50+ International Orders
Menu
The Audible Past: Cultural Origins of Sound Reproduction - Explore the History of Audio Technology for Music Lovers, Audiophiles & Sound Engineers
The Audible Past: Cultural Origins of Sound Reproduction - Explore the History of Audio Technology for Music Lovers, Audiophiles & Sound Engineers

The Audible Past: Cultural Origins of Sound Reproduction - Explore the History of Audio Technology for Music Lovers, Audiophiles & Sound Engineers

$65.97 $119.95 -45% OFF

Free shipping on all orders over $50

7-15 days international

28 people viewing this product right now!

30-day free returns

Secure checkout

65078130

Guranteed safe checkout
amex
paypal
discover
mastercard
visa
apple pay

Description

The Audible Past explores the cultural origins of sound reproduction. It describes a distinctive sound culture that gave birth to the sound recording and the transmission devices so ubiquitous in modern life. With an ear for the unexpected, scholar and musician Jonathan Sterne uses the technological and cultural precursors of telephony, phonography, and radio as an entry point into a history of sound in its own right. Sterne studies the constantly shifting boundary between phenomena organized as "sound" and "not sound." In The Audible Past, this history crisscrosses the liminal regions between bodies and machines, originals and copies, nature and culture, and life and death. Blending cultural studies and the history of communication technology, Sterne follows modern sound technologies back through a historical labyrinth. Along the way, he encounters capitalists and inventors, musicians and philosophers, embalmers and grave robbers, doctors and patients, deaf children and their teachers, professionals and hobbyists, folklorists and tribal singers. The Audible Past tracks the connections between the history of sound and the defining features of modernity: from developments in medicine, physics, and philosophy to the tumultuous shifts of industrial capitalism, colonialism, urbanization, modern technology, and the rise of a new middle class.A provocative history of sound, The Audible Past challenges theoretical commonplaces such as the philosophical privilege of the speaking subject, the visual bias in theories of modernity, and static descriptions of nature. It will interest those in cultural studies, media and communication studies, the new musicology, and the history of technology.