Sabtu, 02 Januari 2010

[V137.Ebook] Ebook Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy

Ebook Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy

How if there is a site that enables you to hunt for referred book Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy from throughout the globe author? Immediately, the site will certainly be astonishing finished. Numerous book collections can be discovered. All will certainly be so easy without difficult point to move from website to website to get guide Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy desired. This is the website that will certainly give you those expectations. By following this site you could acquire lots numbers of book Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy collections from versions sorts of writer and author prominent in this globe. The book such as Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy and also others can be gotten by clicking wonderful on link download.

Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy

Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy



Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy

Ebook Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy

Spend your time also for just few mins to review a book Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy Reading an e-book will never minimize as well as squander your time to be pointless. Checking out, for some people end up being a demand that is to do every day such as spending quality time for consuming. Now, just what regarding you? Do you want to review a book? Now, we will certainly reveal you a brand-new e-book entitled Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy that could be a new method to discover the knowledge. When reading this book, you can get one point to consistently bear in mind in every reading time, even detailed.

The factor of why you can receive and also get this Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy earlier is that this is the book in soft documents type. You can check out guides Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy anywhere you want even you are in the bus, office, residence, and also various other areas. But, you might not need to move or bring guide Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy print wherever you go. So, you won't have larger bag to lug. This is why your option to make far better principle of reading Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy is actually practical from this situation.

Recognizing the means how you can get this book Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy is additionally useful. You have actually remained in best site to start getting this information. Obtain the Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy link that we offer right here and also see the web link. You could purchase the book Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy or get it as soon as possible. You can promptly download this Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy after getting bargain. So, when you require the book quickly, you can straight obtain it. It's so very easy therefore fats, right? You should prefer to by doing this.

Just connect your tool computer or gizmo to the internet attaching. Obtain the contemporary technology to make your downloading and install Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy finished. Also you don't want to check out, you could directly shut guide soft data and open Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy it later. You can additionally quickly get the book all over, considering that Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy it remains in your gadget. Or when remaining in the office, this Noise: A Human History Of Sound And Listening, By David Hendy is additionally recommended to read in your computer system tool.

Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy

Noise explores the human dramas that have revolved around sound at various points in the last 100,000 years, allowing us to think in fresh ways about the meaning of our collective past.

  • Sales Rank: #640651 in Books
  • Published on: 2014-08-26
  • Released on: 2014-08-26
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x .61" w x 5.31" l, .65 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 272 pages

About the Author

David Hendy is a fellow of the Royal Historical Society and Professor of Media and Communications at the University of Sussex. He has been a visiting research fellow at the University of Cambridge; Yale University; and Indiana University, Bloomington. He worked as a journalist and producer at the BBC, and in 2011 was awarded the James W. Carey Award for Outstanding Journalism by the Media Ecology Association of North America for his five-part BBC Radio 3 series, Rewiring the Mind. His book Life on Air: A History of Radio Four won the Longman-History Today Book of the Year Award.

Most helpful customer reviews

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful.
Not much of a noise
By toronto
This is an ok book, but nothing special. It is based on a British Radio Four series, which may have been more interesting. There are a number of interesting anecdotes and facts, but overall it is quite superficial. There is nothing here about animals or the natural world, only humans. It isn't really about "sound" versus "noise", or foundational discussions of the nature of sound, hearing, etc. -- chapters are more or less catch alls about topics like rhetoric in the ancient world, songs of the French Revolution, the back staircases in the Old Town of Edinburgh, etc. Sound is an excuse to discuss these topics. The most interesting chapters are the first and second about prehistoric humans and cave sounds and burial sites (the echoes as spirit evokers). The last chapters are, as one might expect, on the increases in noise in the modern era, but there is really nothing about (for instance) Murray Schafer's views on low and hi fi or Marshall Mcluhan/Edmund Carpenter on changes in acoustic space. He does mention Bernie Krause's work.

The author actually doesn't seem to mind the proliferation of noise/sound all that much: he has a vague exhortation in the conclusion to us to stop being elitist, stop hiding out in quiet places, put down our reading (not including his book, I guess), and listen to the iPod of the person driving us crazy beside us on the bus or to the blasts from the rooms of the annoying neighbour next door -- our problem (according to him) is not that the world is getting too noisy, but that we are prejudiced against uncontrolled sounds bleeding into our ears from all around us. I'm not making this up.

Anyway, every once in a while there is just an error (the index has problems, e.g. the not very interesting reference to John Cage is misindexed); and in one place there is a discussion of the confessional in the middle ages, when it is reasonably well known that the confessional as we know it is a 16th century invention.

The book is well written, amusing in spots, but overall disappointing.

5 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
A gift for persons (like me) with little understanding of the importance of hearing and listening
By Walter E. Workman
I ordered this looking for help in dealing with age related hearing loss and listening imparement. WOW! I started reading when it arrived and could not put it down. A page turner, filled with wonderful research and history, and insights about "noise" that never occured to me. I'm giving copies of this to a number of close friends as Christmas Gifts!

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
The history of noise, the anthropology of ghosts and other illusive things
By VampireCowboy
Writing about the history of noise is like mapping the afterlife or studying the anthropology of ghosts, entirely speculative and seeking to impose a sense of order on the random, and a sense of the physical on the purely ethereal. It is also entirely dependent upon how one chooses to define noise. To me, noise seems unintentional, a byproduct; the author uses a much broader definition that includes intentional noise-making such as music, chanting, prayer, church bells and more. As such, the book might more aptly be called “Sound.”

That broad-brush approach coupled with a narrow (but fascinating) field of examples to illustrate our shared experience with noise may explain my mixed response to the book. I enjoyed it, but it was not at all what I expected, which was an exploration of how we define, process and interact with noise, possibly with neurologic and biologic insights into how it shapes individual and social responses. Instead, the book takes more of a generalist approach, with the author discussing various stages in social evolution and how those humans might have experienced and interacted with certain sounds, and the power dynamics of those who generate noise, those who receive it, and efforts to control both sides of that equation.

It’s an interesting, but understandably subjective approach that moves from the earliest days of pre-literate society, through the Industrial Revolution and ends in the current era of earbuds and YouTube and constant stimulation. It’s filled with some truly memorable moments of discovery (such as how Neolithic paintings in caves occur the most in areas with the highest sonic interest, for example), but the heavy reliance on “surely,” “perhaps,” “maybe” and “it’s likely,” made it maddeningly speculative.

Still, he is a talented writer and a topnotch historian. I was struck most by the care he brought to the epilogue in sections such as this: “If noise is, as most definitions would have it, an ‘unwanted’ sound, then to understand its impact on lived experience properly, we need to work out who exactly considered a given sound as wanted and who exactly considered it unwanted in any particular time and place – and why … the answer to these questions seems to keep coming back to a potent mix of three interwoven things: power, control and anxiety.

That’s a powerful thesis introduced only at the end and I would have loved to have seen this more explicitly "sounded" out from the beginning. Still, I enjoyed the read and even purchased a Tibetan singing bowl after reading the section about the religious application of sounds, specifically bells, to experience it firsthand.

See all 6 customer reviews...

Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy PDF
Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy EPub
Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy Doc
Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy iBooks
Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy rtf
Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy Mobipocket
Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy Kindle

[V137.Ebook] Ebook Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy Doc

[V137.Ebook] Ebook Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy Doc

[V137.Ebook] Ebook Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy Doc
[V137.Ebook] Ebook Noise: A Human History of Sound and Listening, by David Hendy Doc

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar