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OverviewIn Acoustic Profiles, author Randolph Jordan proposes a new model for image-sound analysis that incorporates the vocabulary and methods of environmental studies, specifically exploring the potential of a model based on acoustic ecology. Jordan uses close readings of films to connect the diverse fields of architecture, environmental studies, art history, the history of modernity, and media studies through the tenets of acoustic ecology. In relating ways of thinking about sound from acoustic ecology to film studies and vice versa, Acoustic Profiles takes an interdisciplinary approach to inspire readers to experience cinematic art as a motivator of greater environmental purposes and to understand the role of the media in achieving those purposes.The book's method is referred to as acoustic profiling, a theoretical tool for hearing how filmmakers articulate spatial dimensions in their works. To that end, the book demonstrates how the creative use of media technologies in different fields can be understood relationally through the ecological issues that connect them, revivifying acoustic ecology for media studies while broadening the latter's ecological scope. The book provides a tool kit for readers to hear films with new ears, to think critically about this new listening practice, and to extend that engagement beyond the walls of the screening room by opening works of audiovisual media up to the consideration of soundscape research. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Randolph Jordan (Lecturer in the Humanities, Lecturer in the Humanities, Champlain College St-Lambert, Montreal)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 23.50cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 15.60cm Weight: 0.504kg ISBN: 9780190226077ISBN 10: 0190226072 Pages: 254 Publication Date: 21 November 2023 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Stock Indefinitely Availability: To order Table of ContentsIntroduction: Acoustic Profiling Chapter 1: Audible Transparency: Modernist Acoustic Design in Jacques Tati's Playtime Chapter 2: Immersive Reflexivity: Documenting the Inaudible in Peter Mettler's Picture of Light Chapter 3: Reflective Empathy: Soundscape Composition and the Spatialization of Music in Gus Van Sant's Last Days Chapter 4: The Schizophonographic Imagination: Visualizing the Myth of Sonic Fidelity in David Lynch's Twin Peaks Chapter 5: Unsettled Listening: Tracking Vancouver's Contested Acoustic Profiles across Media Conclusion: A Position Piece IndexReviewsAuthor InformationRandolph Jordan teaches in the Humanities department at Champlain College in Montreal. His research, teaching, and creative practice reside at the intersections of sound studies, film studies, and critical geography. He has published widely on the ways in which the fields of acoustic ecology and film sound studies can inform each other, and is co-editor of Sound, Media, Ecology (2019). As a practitioner, his films and sound work have been presented internationally, most recently as part of the team behind the Impostor Cities exhibition, Canada's official entry to the 2021 Venice Architecture Biennale. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |