Listening and Voice is an updated and expanded edition of Don Ihde’s groundbreaking 1976 classic in the study of sound. Ranging from the experience of sound through language, music, religion, and silence, clear examples and illustrations take the reader into the important and often overlooked role of the auditory in human life. Ihde’s newly added preface, introduction, and chapters extend these sound studies to the technologies of sound, including musical instrumentation, hearing aids, and the new group of scientific technologies which make infra- and ultra-sound available to human experience.
表中的内容
List of Illustrations
Preface to the SUNY Press Edition
Introduction (to the Original)
Part I Introduction
1. In Praise of Sound
2. Under the Signs of Husserl and Heidegger
3. First Phenomenology
Part II Description
4. The Auditory Dimension
5. The Shapes of Sound
6. The Auditory Field
7. Timeful Sound
8. Auditory Horizons
Part III The Imaginative Mode
9. The Polyphony of Experience
10. Auditory Imagination
11. Inner Speech
Part IV Voice
12. The Center of Language
13. Music and Word
14. Silence and Word
15. Dramaturgical Voice
16. The Face, Voice, and Silence
Part V Phenomenologies
17. A Phenomenology of Voice
18. Auditory Imagination
19. Listening
Part VI Acoustic Technologies
20. Bach to Rock: Amplification
21. Jazz Embodied: Instrumentation
22. Embodying Hearing Devices: Digitalization
23. Embodiment, Technologies, and Musics
Notes
Index
关于作者
Don Ihde is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at Stony Brook University, State University of New York. He is the author of many books, including
Experimental Phenomenology: An Introduction, also published by SUNY Press, and
Bodies in Technology.