Phonographic Encounters
Mapping Transnational Cultures of Sound, 1890-1945
Herausgeber: Roy, Elodie A; Moreda Rodriguez, Eva
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Phonographic Encounters
Mapping Transnational Cultures of Sound, 1890-1945
Herausgeber: Roy, Elodie A; Moreda Rodriguez, Eva
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With case studies from China, Australia, the United States, Latin America, Russia, Sweden, Germany, Spain, Portugal, France, and Italy, Phonographic Encounters explores moments of interaction and encounter, as well as tensions, between local and global understandings of recording technologies.
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With case studies from China, Australia, the United States, Latin America, Russia, Sweden, Germany, Spain, Portugal, France, and Italy, Phonographic Encounters explores moments of interaction and encounter, as well as tensions, between local and global understandings of recording technologies.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 268
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. September 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 404g
- ISBN-13: 9781032057118
- ISBN-10: 1032057114
- Artikelnr.: 68711499
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 268
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. September 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 404g
- ISBN-13: 9781032057118
- ISBN-10: 1032057114
- Artikelnr.: 68711499
Elodie A. Roy is a media and material culture theorist. She is the author of Media, Materiality and Memory: Grounding the Groove (Routledge). Eva Moreda Rodríguez is Senior Lecturer in Musicology at the University of Glasgow and the author of two books on music and politics in Francoist Spain. Her research into early recordings in Spain has received funding from the AHRC and the British Academy.
Introduction
Part I: Negotiating Geographical and Cultural Boundaries: Intermediaries,
Traders and Operators
Chapter 1. Sergio Ospina Romero, "Recording Studios on Tour: Traveling
Ventures at the Dawn of the Music Industry"
Chapter 2. Andreas Steen, "Global Transfer, Local Realities: Early
Phonographic Practices and Challenges in China (1900-1914)"
Chapter 3. Henry Reese, "Settler Colonial Soundscapes: Phonograph
Demonstrations in 1890s Australia"
Part II: Repertoires, Auditory Practices and the Shaping of New Listening
Identities
Chapter 4. João Silva, "Portugal and Mechanical Music in the Early
Phonographic Era: An Intermedial Approach"
Chapter 5. Eva Moreda Rodríguez, "Discòfils: Notes on the Birth of the
Record Club and the Record Listener in 1930s Barcelona"
Chapter 6. Ulrik Volgsten, "Mediatization of Music, Musicalization of
Everyday Life: New Ways of Listening to Recorded Sound in Sweden during the
Interwar Years, 1919-1939"
Part III: Phonography and the Reordering of Knowledge and Sensibilities /
Phonography as Ideology
Chapter 7. Karina Zybina, "Recording music, making business: The Russian
recording industry at the beginning of the 20th century"
Chapter 8. Benedetta Zucconi, "'Phonographic Awareness': Recorded Sound in
Early Twentieth-Century Italy between Aesthetic Questions and Economic
Struggles"
Chapter 9. Britta Lange, "The Construction of "das Volk" through Acoustic
Knowledge. Recordings of "Ethnic German Repatriates" from the Institute for
Acoustic Research, 1940-1941"
Part IV: The Heterogeneous Geographies of Consumption
Chapter 10. Jacques Vest, "The Aesthetic of Arrest: The Victor Talking
Machine Company's Ready Made Windows Program, 1909-1913"
Chapter 11. Siel Agugliaro, "The Phonograph as a Transnational Tool:
Selling Music Records in Philadelphia's Little Italy, 1900s-1920s"
Chapter 12. Thomas Henry, "From the Grands Boulevards to Montparnasse: An
Essay on the Geohistory of the Phonograph and Sound Recording Business in
Paris (1878-1940)"
Conclusion
Part I: Negotiating Geographical and Cultural Boundaries: Intermediaries,
Traders and Operators
Chapter 1. Sergio Ospina Romero, "Recording Studios on Tour: Traveling
Ventures at the Dawn of the Music Industry"
Chapter 2. Andreas Steen, "Global Transfer, Local Realities: Early
Phonographic Practices and Challenges in China (1900-1914)"
Chapter 3. Henry Reese, "Settler Colonial Soundscapes: Phonograph
Demonstrations in 1890s Australia"
Part II: Repertoires, Auditory Practices and the Shaping of New Listening
Identities
Chapter 4. João Silva, "Portugal and Mechanical Music in the Early
Phonographic Era: An Intermedial Approach"
Chapter 5. Eva Moreda Rodríguez, "Discòfils: Notes on the Birth of the
Record Club and the Record Listener in 1930s Barcelona"
Chapter 6. Ulrik Volgsten, "Mediatization of Music, Musicalization of
Everyday Life: New Ways of Listening to Recorded Sound in Sweden during the
Interwar Years, 1919-1939"
Part III: Phonography and the Reordering of Knowledge and Sensibilities /
Phonography as Ideology
Chapter 7. Karina Zybina, "Recording music, making business: The Russian
recording industry at the beginning of the 20th century"
Chapter 8. Benedetta Zucconi, "'Phonographic Awareness': Recorded Sound in
Early Twentieth-Century Italy between Aesthetic Questions and Economic
Struggles"
Chapter 9. Britta Lange, "The Construction of "das Volk" through Acoustic
Knowledge. Recordings of "Ethnic German Repatriates" from the Institute for
Acoustic Research, 1940-1941"
Part IV: The Heterogeneous Geographies of Consumption
Chapter 10. Jacques Vest, "The Aesthetic of Arrest: The Victor Talking
Machine Company's Ready Made Windows Program, 1909-1913"
Chapter 11. Siel Agugliaro, "The Phonograph as a Transnational Tool:
Selling Music Records in Philadelphia's Little Italy, 1900s-1920s"
Chapter 12. Thomas Henry, "From the Grands Boulevards to Montparnasse: An
Essay on the Geohistory of the Phonograph and Sound Recording Business in
Paris (1878-1940)"
Conclusion
Introduction
Part I: Negotiating Geographical and Cultural Boundaries: Intermediaries,
Traders and Operators
Chapter 1. Sergio Ospina Romero, "Recording Studios on Tour: Traveling
Ventures at the Dawn of the Music Industry"
Chapter 2. Andreas Steen, "Global Transfer, Local Realities: Early
Phonographic Practices and Challenges in China (1900-1914)"
Chapter 3. Henry Reese, "Settler Colonial Soundscapes: Phonograph
Demonstrations in 1890s Australia"
Part II: Repertoires, Auditory Practices and the Shaping of New Listening
Identities
Chapter 4. João Silva, "Portugal and Mechanical Music in the Early
Phonographic Era: An Intermedial Approach"
Chapter 5. Eva Moreda Rodríguez, "Discòfils: Notes on the Birth of the
Record Club and the Record Listener in 1930s Barcelona"
Chapter 6. Ulrik Volgsten, "Mediatization of Music, Musicalization of
Everyday Life: New Ways of Listening to Recorded Sound in Sweden during the
Interwar Years, 1919-1939"
Part III: Phonography and the Reordering of Knowledge and Sensibilities /
Phonography as Ideology
Chapter 7. Karina Zybina, "Recording music, making business: The Russian
recording industry at the beginning of the 20th century"
Chapter 8. Benedetta Zucconi, "'Phonographic Awareness': Recorded Sound in
Early Twentieth-Century Italy between Aesthetic Questions and Economic
Struggles"
Chapter 9. Britta Lange, "The Construction of "das Volk" through Acoustic
Knowledge. Recordings of "Ethnic German Repatriates" from the Institute for
Acoustic Research, 1940-1941"
Part IV: The Heterogeneous Geographies of Consumption
Chapter 10. Jacques Vest, "The Aesthetic of Arrest: The Victor Talking
Machine Company's Ready Made Windows Program, 1909-1913"
Chapter 11. Siel Agugliaro, "The Phonograph as a Transnational Tool:
Selling Music Records in Philadelphia's Little Italy, 1900s-1920s"
Chapter 12. Thomas Henry, "From the Grands Boulevards to Montparnasse: An
Essay on the Geohistory of the Phonograph and Sound Recording Business in
Paris (1878-1940)"
Conclusion
Part I: Negotiating Geographical and Cultural Boundaries: Intermediaries,
Traders and Operators
Chapter 1. Sergio Ospina Romero, "Recording Studios on Tour: Traveling
Ventures at the Dawn of the Music Industry"
Chapter 2. Andreas Steen, "Global Transfer, Local Realities: Early
Phonographic Practices and Challenges in China (1900-1914)"
Chapter 3. Henry Reese, "Settler Colonial Soundscapes: Phonograph
Demonstrations in 1890s Australia"
Part II: Repertoires, Auditory Practices and the Shaping of New Listening
Identities
Chapter 4. João Silva, "Portugal and Mechanical Music in the Early
Phonographic Era: An Intermedial Approach"
Chapter 5. Eva Moreda Rodríguez, "Discòfils: Notes on the Birth of the
Record Club and the Record Listener in 1930s Barcelona"
Chapter 6. Ulrik Volgsten, "Mediatization of Music, Musicalization of
Everyday Life: New Ways of Listening to Recorded Sound in Sweden during the
Interwar Years, 1919-1939"
Part III: Phonography and the Reordering of Knowledge and Sensibilities /
Phonography as Ideology
Chapter 7. Karina Zybina, "Recording music, making business: The Russian
recording industry at the beginning of the 20th century"
Chapter 8. Benedetta Zucconi, "'Phonographic Awareness': Recorded Sound in
Early Twentieth-Century Italy between Aesthetic Questions and Economic
Struggles"
Chapter 9. Britta Lange, "The Construction of "das Volk" through Acoustic
Knowledge. Recordings of "Ethnic German Repatriates" from the Institute for
Acoustic Research, 1940-1941"
Part IV: The Heterogeneous Geographies of Consumption
Chapter 10. Jacques Vest, "The Aesthetic of Arrest: The Victor Talking
Machine Company's Ready Made Windows Program, 1909-1913"
Chapter 11. Siel Agugliaro, "The Phonograph as a Transnational Tool:
Selling Music Records in Philadelphia's Little Italy, 1900s-1920s"
Chapter 12. Thomas Henry, "From the Grands Boulevards to Montparnasse: An
Essay on the Geohistory of the Phonograph and Sound Recording Business in
Paris (1878-1940)"
Conclusion