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Swamp, Sound, Sign: Reflections on interspecies difference in compositional practice

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Soundscape composition and environmental sound art already imply critiques and negotiations of nature/culture divide and human/non-human difference. This article, along with the composition it frames, thinks through a vision of environmental sound art that completes a link between sonic practice and its object. As a project, it navigates human/animal difference through a sonic knowing which is founded on life’s shared constitution in signs. Sounds beyond spoken words, like the signs that dominate non-human life, are foundationally non-symbolic, and the ability of environmental sound art to resemble and evoke networks of icons and indices is in some respects a privileged position of electroacoustic music. The article presents a non-dualistic sonic thinking within the decentred perspective of the environment, which emerges as a plural product of its engagements and participants. A vision for soundscape composition is presented, along with a frame for its interpretation as sonic thought, or phonosophy.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Swamp, Sound, Sign: Reflections on interspecies difference in compositional practice
Description:
Soundscape composition and environmental sound art already imply critiques and negotiations of nature/culture divide and human/non-human difference.
This article, along with the composition it frames, thinks through a vision of environmental sound art that completes a link between sonic practice and its object.
As a project, it navigates human/animal difference through a sonic knowing which is founded on life’s shared constitution in signs.
Sounds beyond spoken words, like the signs that dominate non-human life, are foundationally non-symbolic, and the ability of environmental sound art to resemble and evoke networks of icons and indices is in some respects a privileged position of electroacoustic music.
The article presents a non-dualistic sonic thinking within the decentred perspective of the environment, which emerges as a plural product of its engagements and participants.
A vision for soundscape composition is presented, along with a frame for its interpretation as sonic thought, or phonosophy.

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