The Oxford Handbook of Sound and Imagination, Volume 1
Herausgeber: Grimshaw-Aagaard, Mark; Knakkergaard, Martin; Walther-Hansen, Mads
The Oxford Handbook of Sound and Imagination, Volume 1
Herausgeber: Grimshaw-Aagaard, Mark; Knakkergaard, Martin; Walther-Hansen, Mads
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
In this two-volume Handbook, contributors address the tendency to discuss musical imagination through terms like compositional creativity or performance technique, correcting the current bias towards visual imagination to instead highlight the many forms of sonic and musical imagination.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- The Oxford Handbook of Sound and Imagination, Volume 2223,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of Music and Advertising252,99 €
- Susan RogersThis Is What It Sounds Like10,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of Popular Music in the Nordic Countries187,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of Assessment Policy and Practice in Music Education, Volume 2233,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of Dance and Competition223,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of Choral Pedagogy234,99 €
-
-
-
In this two-volume Handbook, contributors address the tendency to discuss musical imagination through terms like compositional creativity or performance technique, correcting the current bias towards visual imagination to instead highlight the many forms of sonic and musical imagination.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 880
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. August 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 256mm x 186mm x 50mm
- Gewicht: 1660g
- ISBN-13: 9780190460167
- ISBN-10: 0190460164
- Artikelnr.: 56403308
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 880
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. August 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 256mm x 186mm x 50mm
- Gewicht: 1660g
- ISBN-13: 9780190460167
- ISBN-10: 0190460164
- Artikelnr.: 56403308
Mark Grimshaw-Aagaard is Obel Professor of Music at Aalborg University, Denmark. He has published widely across subjects as diverse as sound, biofeedback in computer games, virtuality, the Uncanny Valley, and IT systems and also writes free, open source software for virtual research environments (WIKINDX). Mark is series editor for the Palgrave Macmillan series Studies in Sound, and his books include the anthologies Game Sound Technology & Player Interaction (2011) and The Oxford Handbook of Virtuality (OUP 2014), and, with co-author Tom Garner, a monograph entitled Sonic Virtuality (OUP 2015). Mads Walther-Hansen is Associate Professor and head of the Music Programme at Aalborg University, Denmark. He writes on music listening, music production, sound technology, and sound analysis, and he has published several articles, chapters, and conference papers on cognition and language in relation to music production that examines the conceptualization of sound and the effect of recording technology on the listening experience. Martin Knakkergaard is Senior Lecturer in the Music Programme at Aaborg University, Denmark. He is currently the leader of the Obel Music Project and was former head of the Music Programme at Aalborg University for more than 12 years. His research interests are primarily within the field of Music Technology. Martin has in recent years turned towards the study of musicological questions of a more fundamental nature. He is also the editor of the Danish Dictionary of Music, Gads Musikleksikon (2003 and 2005) and editor of the music periodical Col Legno (1993-1999), and the music journal Danish Musicology Online (2010-2015).
* Contributor Affiliations
* Acknowledgments
* Introduction
* MARK GRIMSHAW-AAGAARD
* MADS WALTHER-HANSEN
* MARTIN KNAKKERGAARD
* PART I. FOUNDATIONS
* Chapter 1. Imagining Sound as the Absolute: The Case of Sarangadeva
* SAAM TRIVEDI
* Chapter 2. The Sensation of Sound and Imagination in a Historical
Perspective
* SVEN HROAR KLEMPE
* Chapter 3. Imagining the Sounds Themselves
* MALCOLM RIDDOCH
* Chapter 4. Auditory Imagination. A Phenomenological Perspective
* DANIEL A. SCHMICKING
* Chapter 5. The Necessity of Vagueness and Ambiguity to the Imagining
of Sound
* MARK GRIMSHAW-AAGAARD
* Chapter 6. Listening and/as Imagination
* MARCEL COBUSSEN
* Chapter 7. Imagination, Multimodality, and Sound
* JOAQUIM BRAGA
* Chapter 8. Some Anticipatory, Kinesthetic, and Dynamic Aspects of
Auditory Imagery
* TIMOTHY L. HUBBARD
* PART II. SOCIETY AND IDENTITY
* Chapter 9. Into the Sounds of War: Imagination, Media, and Experience
* MICHAEL BULL
* Chapter 10. Shifting Metaphors in the Conceptualization of Musical
Knowledge and Learning
* PETTER DYNDAHL
* Chapter 11. Fantasy Control: Implications for Distributed Imagination
and Affect Attunement in Music and Sound
* ULRIK VOLGSTEN
* Chapter 12. Musical Preferences and the Imagined Self
* ALEXANDRA LAMONT
* Chapter 13. Burmese Spirit Worship: Music as a Medium for the
Transformation of Self
* JUDITH BECKER
* Chapter 14. Opera and the South African Political
* CHRISTOPHER BALLANTINE
* Chapter 15. Noise and Tranquility at Stonehenge: The Political
Acoustics of Cultural Heritage
* ODD ARE BERKAAK
* Chapter 16. The Sonic Abject: Sound and Violence in the Legal
Imagination
* VEIT ERLMANN
* Chapter 17. Building Worlds Together with Sound and Music:
Imagination as an Active Engagement Between Ourselves
* KAI TUURI AND HENNA-RIIKKA PELTOLA
* Chapter 18. Sonic Branding: From Brand Image to Brand Imagination
* CLARA GUSTAFSSON
* Chapter 19. Radio Imaginaries: Music, Space, and Broadcasting in the
1950s
* MORTEN MICHELSEN
* PART III. LANGUAGE
* Chapter 20. Audio Inside the Mind: The Poetics of Sound
* SEÁN STREET
* Chapter 21. The Acoustic Imaginations of East Asia
* KERIM YASAR
* Chapter 22. Imagining Sonic Stories
* VINCENT MEELBERG
* Chapter 23. Sound Quality, Language, and Cognitive Metaphors
* MADS WALTHER-HANSEN
* Chapter 24. Speech, Sound, Technology
* JOHANNES MULDER AND THEO VAN LEEUWEN
* Chapter 25. Divergent Images of Early Sound Experience during Infancy
and Early Childhood
* MICHAEL FORRESTER
* PART IV. IMAGE
* Chapter 26. The Aural Dimension in Comic Art
* MARCO PELLITTERI
* Chapter 27. Sound, Museums, and the Modulation of the Imagination
* WILLIAM WHITTINGTON
* Chapter 28. Cinema as Social Knowledge. The Case of the Beatles in
the Studio
* FRANÇOIS RIBAC
* Chapter 29. Concerning the Iconic Signification of Music in Cinema
* MICHAEL CHANAN
* Chapter 30. Embodied Listening: A Moving Dimension of Imagination
* MARTINE HUVENNE
* Chapter 31. The Listener's Choice: The Sounds of Music, Meanings, and
Measurements
* OLA STOCKFELT
* PART V. SPACE AND PLACE
* Chapter 32. Imagining Acoustic Spaces Through Listening and Acoustic
Ecology
* BARRY TRUAX
* Chapter 33. Presence, Environment, and Sound and the Role of
Imagination
* MARK GRIMSHAW-AAGAARD
* Chapter 34. Music Places: Imaginative Transports of Listening
* JUDY LOCHHEAD
* Chapter 35. Beacons of Sound
* MARTIN KNAKKERGAARD
* Chapter 36. The Sound of an Endless Column: How Music Imagines
Unimaginable Space
* ZOHAR EITAN AND HILA TAMIR-OSTROVER
* Chapter 37. Auditory Mirrors: About the Politics of Hearing
* SABINE SANIO
* Chapter 38. What You Hear is Where You Are
* LINDA-RUTH SALTER
* Chapter 39. Bridging the Other-Real: Video Game Sound and the
Imagination
* TOM A. GARNER
* Index
* Acknowledgments
* Introduction
* MARK GRIMSHAW-AAGAARD
* MADS WALTHER-HANSEN
* MARTIN KNAKKERGAARD
* PART I. FOUNDATIONS
* Chapter 1. Imagining Sound as the Absolute: The Case of Sarangadeva
* SAAM TRIVEDI
* Chapter 2. The Sensation of Sound and Imagination in a Historical
Perspective
* SVEN HROAR KLEMPE
* Chapter 3. Imagining the Sounds Themselves
* MALCOLM RIDDOCH
* Chapter 4. Auditory Imagination. A Phenomenological Perspective
* DANIEL A. SCHMICKING
* Chapter 5. The Necessity of Vagueness and Ambiguity to the Imagining
of Sound
* MARK GRIMSHAW-AAGAARD
* Chapter 6. Listening and/as Imagination
* MARCEL COBUSSEN
* Chapter 7. Imagination, Multimodality, and Sound
* JOAQUIM BRAGA
* Chapter 8. Some Anticipatory, Kinesthetic, and Dynamic Aspects of
Auditory Imagery
* TIMOTHY L. HUBBARD
* PART II. SOCIETY AND IDENTITY
* Chapter 9. Into the Sounds of War: Imagination, Media, and Experience
* MICHAEL BULL
* Chapter 10. Shifting Metaphors in the Conceptualization of Musical
Knowledge and Learning
* PETTER DYNDAHL
* Chapter 11. Fantasy Control: Implications for Distributed Imagination
and Affect Attunement in Music and Sound
* ULRIK VOLGSTEN
* Chapter 12. Musical Preferences and the Imagined Self
* ALEXANDRA LAMONT
* Chapter 13. Burmese Spirit Worship: Music as a Medium for the
Transformation of Self
* JUDITH BECKER
* Chapter 14. Opera and the South African Political
* CHRISTOPHER BALLANTINE
* Chapter 15. Noise and Tranquility at Stonehenge: The Political
Acoustics of Cultural Heritage
* ODD ARE BERKAAK
* Chapter 16. The Sonic Abject: Sound and Violence in the Legal
Imagination
* VEIT ERLMANN
* Chapter 17. Building Worlds Together with Sound and Music:
Imagination as an Active Engagement Between Ourselves
* KAI TUURI AND HENNA-RIIKKA PELTOLA
* Chapter 18. Sonic Branding: From Brand Image to Brand Imagination
* CLARA GUSTAFSSON
* Chapter 19. Radio Imaginaries: Music, Space, and Broadcasting in the
1950s
* MORTEN MICHELSEN
* PART III. LANGUAGE
* Chapter 20. Audio Inside the Mind: The Poetics of Sound
* SEÁN STREET
* Chapter 21. The Acoustic Imaginations of East Asia
* KERIM YASAR
* Chapter 22. Imagining Sonic Stories
* VINCENT MEELBERG
* Chapter 23. Sound Quality, Language, and Cognitive Metaphors
* MADS WALTHER-HANSEN
* Chapter 24. Speech, Sound, Technology
* JOHANNES MULDER AND THEO VAN LEEUWEN
* Chapter 25. Divergent Images of Early Sound Experience during Infancy
and Early Childhood
* MICHAEL FORRESTER
* PART IV. IMAGE
* Chapter 26. The Aural Dimension in Comic Art
* MARCO PELLITTERI
* Chapter 27. Sound, Museums, and the Modulation of the Imagination
* WILLIAM WHITTINGTON
* Chapter 28. Cinema as Social Knowledge. The Case of the Beatles in
the Studio
* FRANÇOIS RIBAC
* Chapter 29. Concerning the Iconic Signification of Music in Cinema
* MICHAEL CHANAN
* Chapter 30. Embodied Listening: A Moving Dimension of Imagination
* MARTINE HUVENNE
* Chapter 31. The Listener's Choice: The Sounds of Music, Meanings, and
Measurements
* OLA STOCKFELT
* PART V. SPACE AND PLACE
* Chapter 32. Imagining Acoustic Spaces Through Listening and Acoustic
Ecology
* BARRY TRUAX
* Chapter 33. Presence, Environment, and Sound and the Role of
Imagination
* MARK GRIMSHAW-AAGAARD
* Chapter 34. Music Places: Imaginative Transports of Listening
* JUDY LOCHHEAD
* Chapter 35. Beacons of Sound
* MARTIN KNAKKERGAARD
* Chapter 36. The Sound of an Endless Column: How Music Imagines
Unimaginable Space
* ZOHAR EITAN AND HILA TAMIR-OSTROVER
* Chapter 37. Auditory Mirrors: About the Politics of Hearing
* SABINE SANIO
* Chapter 38. What You Hear is Where You Are
* LINDA-RUTH SALTER
* Chapter 39. Bridging the Other-Real: Video Game Sound and the
Imagination
* TOM A. GARNER
* Index
* Contributor Affiliations
* Acknowledgments
* Introduction
* MARK GRIMSHAW-AAGAARD
* MADS WALTHER-HANSEN
* MARTIN KNAKKERGAARD
* PART I. FOUNDATIONS
* Chapter 1. Imagining Sound as the Absolute: The Case of Sarangadeva
* SAAM TRIVEDI
* Chapter 2. The Sensation of Sound and Imagination in a Historical
Perspective
* SVEN HROAR KLEMPE
* Chapter 3. Imagining the Sounds Themselves
* MALCOLM RIDDOCH
* Chapter 4. Auditory Imagination. A Phenomenological Perspective
* DANIEL A. SCHMICKING
* Chapter 5. The Necessity of Vagueness and Ambiguity to the Imagining
of Sound
* MARK GRIMSHAW-AAGAARD
* Chapter 6. Listening and/as Imagination
* MARCEL COBUSSEN
* Chapter 7. Imagination, Multimodality, and Sound
* JOAQUIM BRAGA
* Chapter 8. Some Anticipatory, Kinesthetic, and Dynamic Aspects of
Auditory Imagery
* TIMOTHY L. HUBBARD
* PART II. SOCIETY AND IDENTITY
* Chapter 9. Into the Sounds of War: Imagination, Media, and Experience
* MICHAEL BULL
* Chapter 10. Shifting Metaphors in the Conceptualization of Musical
Knowledge and Learning
* PETTER DYNDAHL
* Chapter 11. Fantasy Control: Implications for Distributed Imagination
and Affect Attunement in Music and Sound
* ULRIK VOLGSTEN
* Chapter 12. Musical Preferences and the Imagined Self
* ALEXANDRA LAMONT
* Chapter 13. Burmese Spirit Worship: Music as a Medium for the
Transformation of Self
* JUDITH BECKER
* Chapter 14. Opera and the South African Political
* CHRISTOPHER BALLANTINE
* Chapter 15. Noise and Tranquility at Stonehenge: The Political
Acoustics of Cultural Heritage
* ODD ARE BERKAAK
* Chapter 16. The Sonic Abject: Sound and Violence in the Legal
Imagination
* VEIT ERLMANN
* Chapter 17. Building Worlds Together with Sound and Music:
Imagination as an Active Engagement Between Ourselves
* KAI TUURI AND HENNA-RIIKKA PELTOLA
* Chapter 18. Sonic Branding: From Brand Image to Brand Imagination
* CLARA GUSTAFSSON
* Chapter 19. Radio Imaginaries: Music, Space, and Broadcasting in the
1950s
* MORTEN MICHELSEN
* PART III. LANGUAGE
* Chapter 20. Audio Inside the Mind: The Poetics of Sound
* SEÁN STREET
* Chapter 21. The Acoustic Imaginations of East Asia
* KERIM YASAR
* Chapter 22. Imagining Sonic Stories
* VINCENT MEELBERG
* Chapter 23. Sound Quality, Language, and Cognitive Metaphors
* MADS WALTHER-HANSEN
* Chapter 24. Speech, Sound, Technology
* JOHANNES MULDER AND THEO VAN LEEUWEN
* Chapter 25. Divergent Images of Early Sound Experience during Infancy
and Early Childhood
* MICHAEL FORRESTER
* PART IV. IMAGE
* Chapter 26. The Aural Dimension in Comic Art
* MARCO PELLITTERI
* Chapter 27. Sound, Museums, and the Modulation of the Imagination
* WILLIAM WHITTINGTON
* Chapter 28. Cinema as Social Knowledge. The Case of the Beatles in
the Studio
* FRANÇOIS RIBAC
* Chapter 29. Concerning the Iconic Signification of Music in Cinema
* MICHAEL CHANAN
* Chapter 30. Embodied Listening: A Moving Dimension of Imagination
* MARTINE HUVENNE
* Chapter 31. The Listener's Choice: The Sounds of Music, Meanings, and
Measurements
* OLA STOCKFELT
* PART V. SPACE AND PLACE
* Chapter 32. Imagining Acoustic Spaces Through Listening and Acoustic
Ecology
* BARRY TRUAX
* Chapter 33. Presence, Environment, and Sound and the Role of
Imagination
* MARK GRIMSHAW-AAGAARD
* Chapter 34. Music Places: Imaginative Transports of Listening
* JUDY LOCHHEAD
* Chapter 35. Beacons of Sound
* MARTIN KNAKKERGAARD
* Chapter 36. The Sound of an Endless Column: How Music Imagines
Unimaginable Space
* ZOHAR EITAN AND HILA TAMIR-OSTROVER
* Chapter 37. Auditory Mirrors: About the Politics of Hearing
* SABINE SANIO
* Chapter 38. What You Hear is Where You Are
* LINDA-RUTH SALTER
* Chapter 39. Bridging the Other-Real: Video Game Sound and the
Imagination
* TOM A. GARNER
* Index
* Acknowledgments
* Introduction
* MARK GRIMSHAW-AAGAARD
* MADS WALTHER-HANSEN
* MARTIN KNAKKERGAARD
* PART I. FOUNDATIONS
* Chapter 1. Imagining Sound as the Absolute: The Case of Sarangadeva
* SAAM TRIVEDI
* Chapter 2. The Sensation of Sound and Imagination in a Historical
Perspective
* SVEN HROAR KLEMPE
* Chapter 3. Imagining the Sounds Themselves
* MALCOLM RIDDOCH
* Chapter 4. Auditory Imagination. A Phenomenological Perspective
* DANIEL A. SCHMICKING
* Chapter 5. The Necessity of Vagueness and Ambiguity to the Imagining
of Sound
* MARK GRIMSHAW-AAGAARD
* Chapter 6. Listening and/as Imagination
* MARCEL COBUSSEN
* Chapter 7. Imagination, Multimodality, and Sound
* JOAQUIM BRAGA
* Chapter 8. Some Anticipatory, Kinesthetic, and Dynamic Aspects of
Auditory Imagery
* TIMOTHY L. HUBBARD
* PART II. SOCIETY AND IDENTITY
* Chapter 9. Into the Sounds of War: Imagination, Media, and Experience
* MICHAEL BULL
* Chapter 10. Shifting Metaphors in the Conceptualization of Musical
Knowledge and Learning
* PETTER DYNDAHL
* Chapter 11. Fantasy Control: Implications for Distributed Imagination
and Affect Attunement in Music and Sound
* ULRIK VOLGSTEN
* Chapter 12. Musical Preferences and the Imagined Self
* ALEXANDRA LAMONT
* Chapter 13. Burmese Spirit Worship: Music as a Medium for the
Transformation of Self
* JUDITH BECKER
* Chapter 14. Opera and the South African Political
* CHRISTOPHER BALLANTINE
* Chapter 15. Noise and Tranquility at Stonehenge: The Political
Acoustics of Cultural Heritage
* ODD ARE BERKAAK
* Chapter 16. The Sonic Abject: Sound and Violence in the Legal
Imagination
* VEIT ERLMANN
* Chapter 17. Building Worlds Together with Sound and Music:
Imagination as an Active Engagement Between Ourselves
* KAI TUURI AND HENNA-RIIKKA PELTOLA
* Chapter 18. Sonic Branding: From Brand Image to Brand Imagination
* CLARA GUSTAFSSON
* Chapter 19. Radio Imaginaries: Music, Space, and Broadcasting in the
1950s
* MORTEN MICHELSEN
* PART III. LANGUAGE
* Chapter 20. Audio Inside the Mind: The Poetics of Sound
* SEÁN STREET
* Chapter 21. The Acoustic Imaginations of East Asia
* KERIM YASAR
* Chapter 22. Imagining Sonic Stories
* VINCENT MEELBERG
* Chapter 23. Sound Quality, Language, and Cognitive Metaphors
* MADS WALTHER-HANSEN
* Chapter 24. Speech, Sound, Technology
* JOHANNES MULDER AND THEO VAN LEEUWEN
* Chapter 25. Divergent Images of Early Sound Experience during Infancy
and Early Childhood
* MICHAEL FORRESTER
* PART IV. IMAGE
* Chapter 26. The Aural Dimension in Comic Art
* MARCO PELLITTERI
* Chapter 27. Sound, Museums, and the Modulation of the Imagination
* WILLIAM WHITTINGTON
* Chapter 28. Cinema as Social Knowledge. The Case of the Beatles in
the Studio
* FRANÇOIS RIBAC
* Chapter 29. Concerning the Iconic Signification of Music in Cinema
* MICHAEL CHANAN
* Chapter 30. Embodied Listening: A Moving Dimension of Imagination
* MARTINE HUVENNE
* Chapter 31. The Listener's Choice: The Sounds of Music, Meanings, and
Measurements
* OLA STOCKFELT
* PART V. SPACE AND PLACE
* Chapter 32. Imagining Acoustic Spaces Through Listening and Acoustic
Ecology
* BARRY TRUAX
* Chapter 33. Presence, Environment, and Sound and the Role of
Imagination
* MARK GRIMSHAW-AAGAARD
* Chapter 34. Music Places: Imaginative Transports of Listening
* JUDY LOCHHEAD
* Chapter 35. Beacons of Sound
* MARTIN KNAKKERGAARD
* Chapter 36. The Sound of an Endless Column: How Music Imagines
Unimaginable Space
* ZOHAR EITAN AND HILA TAMIR-OSTROVER
* Chapter 37. Auditory Mirrors: About the Politics of Hearing
* SABINE SANIO
* Chapter 38. What You Hear is Where You Are
* LINDA-RUTH SALTER
* Chapter 39. Bridging the Other-Real: Video Game Sound and the
Imagination
* TOM A. GARNER
* Index