Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

White noise: sound, materiality and the crowd in contemporary heritage practice

2016; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 23; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/13527258.2016.1261919

ISSN

1470-3610

Autores

Paul Tourle,

Tópico(s)

Conservation Techniques and Studies

Resumo

Sounds of our Shores was a joint venture between the National Trust and the British Library that employed a crowdsourcing methodology to create a permanent archive of British coastal sounds. In this paper I pursue a critical analysis of that project in order to problematise the recent emergence of practices aimed at capturing and preserving everyday sounds as 'sonic heritage'. More broadly, I use the case study to think through two trends in contemporary heritage practice. These are, first, a turn towards crowdsourcing as a means of democratising representation, and, second, a current trend towards the accumulation and preservation of an ever-broader range and mass of materials as heritage. The framework for my analysis is provided by a dual reading of the term 'white noise'. Thus, for my purposes, 'white noise' describes both an acoustic phenomenon (the product of every possible frequency sounding simultaneously; a sonic expression of perfect equality and perfect chaos), and a particular mode of racialised sound production and audition, modulated and constrained by whiteness. White noise displaces and silences its Others. The white 'listening ear', to borrow Jennifer Stoever-Ackerman's terminology, is either deaf to, or appalled by, the sounds those Others make.

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