Resisting Neoliberal Aurality in the Academic Library

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Presentation transcript:

Resisting Neoliberal Aurality in the Academic Library Kyle Shockey Indiana University @kshockey04 k.shockey04@gmail.com CAPAL ‘15 – 1 June 2015

In Brief What this is Convergence of discourses, literature Reconceptualization of space Introduction of ethical framework What this is not A how-to A prescription A checklist

neoliberalism What do I mean?

“technology of governing” (Enright 2013; Ong 2007, p. 3)

“background epistemic or ideological context” (James 2014, p. 139) IT “SETS THE PARAMATERS WITHIN WHICH SPECIFIC PRACTICES ARE MEANINGFUL AND FUNCTIONAL” (JAMES 2014, P. 139; WINNUBST 2012)

How does governance map to epistemology? Economic governance Social epistemology Enright 2013; Harvey 2005 Privitization Financialization Management & Manipulation of Crises State Redistribution James 2014; Winnubst 2012 Deregulation Intensification Resilience (James 2015) Human capital

This has precedent. Attali (1997)

Sound studies & aurality

Why sound studies? Deep listening as a critical lens makes us rethink (Bull and Back 2003): the meaning, nature, and significance of our social experience our relation to community how we relate to others, ourselves, and the spaces and places we inhabit our relationship to power

The Simon Frazer Influence R. Murray Schafer Barry Truax

(Schafer 1975; Blesser & Salter 2007) The Soundscape (Schafer 1975; Blesser & Salter 2007)

NOISE! Noise is a value judgment. Which contributes to: (Bijsterveld 2003, 2007; Hendy 2013) Which contributes to: Power/political posturing in social space Branding of sonic capital Suppression of dissent Privitization of social sound space Classism through aesthetics of listening Noise abatement as political and economic efficiency

It’s all about noise abatement. (Yelenik and Bressler 2013)

This is unquestioned.

The framework Interpersonal ethics – Warren following Levinas.

Photo Credits Barry Truax photo courtesy of Barry Truax & Simon Frazer University R. Murray Schafer photo courtesy of Wikimedia

References Attali, J. (1977). Noise: The political economy of music. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Blesser, B and Salter, L. R. (2007). Spaces speak, are you listening?: Experiencing aural architecture. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Bijsterveld, K. (2003). “The diabolical symphony of the mechanical age: Technology and symbolism of sound in European and North American noise abatement campaigns, 1900-40.” In Bull, M. and Back, L., eds. The auditory culture reader, 165-189. Oxford: Berg. Bijsterveld, K. (2008). Mechanical sound: Technology, culture, and public problems of noise in the twentieth century. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. Bull, M. and Back, L., (2003). “Introduction: into sound.” In Bull, M. and Back, L., eds. The auditory culture reader, 1-18. Oxford: Berg.

References, continued Enright, N. (2013). “The violence of information literacy: Neoliberalism and the human as capital.” In Gregory, L. and Higgins, S., eds., Information literacy and social justice: Radical professional praxis, 17-38. Sacramento, CA: Library Juice Press. Harvey, D. (2005). A brief history of neoliberalism. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Harvey, D. (2007). “Neoliberalism as Creative Destruction.” The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 610(1), 21-44. Hendy, D. (2013). Noise: A human history of sound and listening. London: Profile Books. James, R. (2014). “Neoliberal Noise: Attali, Foucault, and the biopolitics of uncool.” Culture, Theory and Critique 55(2), 138-158. James, R. (2015). Resilience and melancholy: Pop music, feminism, neoliberalism. Winchester, UK: Zero Books. Ong, A. (2007). “Boundary crossings: Neoliberalism as a mobile technology.” Trans Inst Br Geogr 32(3–8), 3-8.

References, continued Schafer, R. M. (1994). The soundscape: Our sonic environment and the tuning of our world. Rochester, VT. : Destiny Books. Schwartz, H. (2003). “The indefensible ear: A history.” In ” In Bull, M. and Back, L., eds. The auditory culture reader, 489-510. Oxford: Berg. Truax, B. (2001). Acoustic Communication. 2nd ed. Westport, CT: Ablex. Warren, J. R. (2014) Music and ethical responsibility. New York: Cambridge University Press. Winnubst, S. (2012). “The queer thing about neoliberal pleasure.” Foucault Studies 14, 79-97. Yelenik, K. and Bressler, D. (2013). The perfect storm: A review of the literature on increased noise levels in academic libraries. College & Undergraduate Libraries 20(1): 40-51.