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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Odyssey Towards a Sirenic Thinking: An Attempt at a Self-Criticism of the Listening Paradigm Within Sound Studies
Hannah L. M. EßlerJim Igor Kallenbergsubject
100 Philosophie und Psychologie::100 Philosophie::102 VerschiedenesSelf-criticismsirensB1-5802audiocentrismSound studies102odysseusPhilosophyacoustemologysensory regimecritical theoryCritical theoryAestheticsacoustic instrumentsonic thinkingActive listeningsound studiesvisuocentrismPhilosophy (General)Psychologydescription
Abstract This text departs from a contradictory claim in deaf studies and sound studies: both disciplines describe a hierarchical regime of the sensible – visuocentrism and audiocentrism – which they try to counter with conceptualisations as “acoustemology” or “deaf gain.” However, as we argue, they both thereby erect what they claim to overcome: a sensual regime that privileges one sense over another and a restricted conception of subjectivity deriving from it. First, we draw a philosophical line in the critique of sensual regimes. Then we propose a figure for the transcendence of the separation of the sensible: in re-reading of the myth of Odysseus and the sirens, we engage various examples from literature, art, and acoustics to describe sirens as a mythological and technical archetype of the transcendence of the sensual regime, as well as reified subjectivity. The question, then, is not how to escape the sirens, but how they can be approached. It is necessary, we argue, for sound studies to develop a critical self-consciousness of its own restricted concepts in order to move from sonic thinking towards a sirenic thinking.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021-10-01 | Open Philosophy |