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Course Description
An intermediate-level course focusing on sound theory, sound as media,
and the relationship between sound and image. These topics will be examined
through reading assignments, screenings and listening sessions, in-class
presentations, writing and sound recording assignments. In this class,
students will engage with the history of audio reproduction, the concepts
of French theorist Michel Chion, the psychoanalytic theories on the female
body and voice, the notion of the soundscape, and the relationship between
ethnography, colonialism, and audio technology. Students have a choice
of doing a sound-based media project or a research paper for their final
project. Workshops on sound recording and sound editing may be held during the second half of
the semester based on the technical requirements of student projects.
This class encourages a critical, creative approach to the medium, non-traditional
solutions, and awareness of the history of sound technology and media
production. This course fulfills the media theory requirement for the media studies major. Prerequisite: Intro to Media Studies, or Language of Film, or
an intro-level music theory course.

Course Organization
Class activities include discussion of reading assignments, screenings,
audio presentations, critiques, technical demonstrations, as well as individual
and group assignments. Both works by students and examples of independent
media works will be presented in class. Depending on funding and availability,
guest speakers (sound artists, film and videomakers, media artists, programmers,
scholars, etc.) will be invited to class, or to the Media Studies cinematheque
series - be prepared to attend out-of-class screenings and lectures.
Please turn off all cell phones and pagers during
class. These and other diversions are not acceptable during class time,
and will lower your grade.
| Course Requirements
|
| 1. |
Attend all classes |
| 2. |
Participation in class discussions and
group critiques |
| 3. |
Completion of writing and recording assignments
as well as a final project or research paper |

Attendance
Attendance and participation of all classes is required. Do not miss class
or arrive late! If you miss class 3 times without
a proper excuse, (e.g. a doctor's note if you are sick) you fail the class.
Absences must be cleared by me before or after (in case of emergencies
only) the class you missed in order for it to not affect your final grade.
Attendance is determined by when I take roll.
Class Participation
Your active, well-prepared participation in class discussions is essential
to creating a dynamic (i.e. not boring!) learning environment. Although
you will not receive a letter grade for class participation, it will figure
into your final grade based on my observations.
We may study sexually explicit, political, and otherwise challenging
material in this course. These are not included for shock value, but are
legitimate investigations of controversial subject matters in media. You
are certainly encouraged to explore difficult and complex subject matters
in your work, and you should be prepared to consider these issues intellectually
and emotionally. Our class is a safe space in which students can express
their beliefs and opinions. You always have a voice, but please be respectful
of others as well. Abusive language and behavior are not be tolerated.
Open-mindedness is encouraged!

Class Assignments and Final Paper/Project
Students will complete five assignments for this course, each will count
for 10% of your grade:
| 1. |
In-class writing assignment
compare two audio excerpts. |
| 2. |
Take-home audio visual analysis assignment. |
| 3. |
Perform a psychoanalytic reading of the
film clip I show in class. |
| 4. |
Prepare a 5 minute excerpt from a film
or video to present in class. |
| 5. |
Prepare a 5 minute recording. Group project |
Students can choose to complete a final research paper or media project
for this class, and it will count for 30% of your grade:
| • |
Research papers should be
between 8-10 pages long, typed and double-spaced. Your topic should
be based on the subjects and theories we studied in class. Final papers
must include footnotes, a bibliography, film/video/discography. Additional
research is required. Students must submit
an abstract by Week 10 for approval of paper topic, and may
continue to meet individually with instructor to discuss ideas and
progress on the paper. Please include a bibliography with your abstract. |
| • |
Project subject and format to be determined
by student, and must be approved by instructor:
| - |
Final projects must
respond to the topic of this class, they should engage with class
readings and discussions, as well as media works presented in
class; |
| - |
Film/video/audio pieces: recommended
length is 5 min.; |
| - |
Other suggested format - installation,
performance, web-based, hybrid - please specify in your treatment. |
| - |
Students must
submit a treatment by Week 10 for approval |
| - |
Please include the technical needs
of the project and your skill level in the treatment. Workshops
will be scheduled accordingly with Kelly and Eddie. |
| - |
At least one work-in-progress critique
will be scheduled before final versions of the projects are
due. |
|
Unless an extension is approved by myself in advance
of the due date, your grade are reduced by one letter grade (i.e. B to C)
per class day your project is late. You are encouraged to meet with
me individually during my office hours to discuss your assignments, your
grades, and your overall performance in class. I am always open to suggestions
and feedback!

Reading Assignments
Required readings are drawn from the textbooks below and articles I will
post on our class web site. (go to schedule) If you want to purchase copies
of the books, there are copies at Huntley Bookstore, go to amazon.com
or half.com.
Required Readings
Rick Altman, editor, Sound Theory Sound Practice, Routledge, New York, 1992.
John Cage, Silence: Lectures and Writings, Wesleyan University Press, 1961.
Michel Chion, Audio-Vision: Sound on Screen, trans. Claudia Gorbman, Columbia University Press, New York, 1994.
Michel Chion, The Voice in Cinema, trans. Claudia Gorbman, Columbia University Press, New York, 1999.
R. Murray Schafer, The Soundscape: Our Sonic Environment and the Tuning of the World, Destiny Books, Rochester, VT, 1977.
Kaja Silverman, The Acoustic Mirror; The Female Voice in Psychoanalysis and Cinema, Indiana University Press, Indianapolis, 1988.
Jonathan Sterne, The Audible Past: Cultural Origins of Sound Reproduction, Duke University Press, Durham and London, 2003.
Michael Taussig, Mimesis and Alterity: A Particular History of the Senses, Routledge, New York, 1993.
Suggested Readings
Jacques Attali, Noise: The Political Economy of Music, Univ. of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 2002.
Justin Bennett, Noise Map, publisher?, ISBN 90-808081-1-3
Michael Bull & Les Back, eds., The Auditory Culture Reader (Sensory Formations), Berg Publishers, 2004.
Simon Frith & Andrew Goodwin, eds. On Record: Rock, Pop, and the Written Word, Pantheon Books, New York, 1990.
Douglas Kahn, Noise, Water, Meat: A History of Sound in the Arts, MIT Press, 2001.
Friedrich A. Kittler, Gramophone, FIlm, Typewriter, trans. Geoffrey Winthrop-Young & Michael Wutz, Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA, 1999.
Henri Lefebvre, The Production of Space, trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith, Blackwell Publishers Inc., Cambridge, MA, 1991.
David Schwarz, Listening Subjects: Music, Psychoanalysis, Culture, Duke University Press, Durham, NC, 1997.
Emily Thompson, The Soundscape of Modernity: Architectural Acoustics and the Culture of Listening in America (1900-1933), MIT Press, 2004.

Grading
Your final grade will be based on the following |
| • |
30% Final Project or Paper
(10% treatment/abstract + 20% final version) |
| • |
50% 5 assignments (10% each) |
| • |
Class participation* 20% |
* Your general performance in class including participation, attendance,
and punctuality, except in the special cases listed above, such as if
you have more than 3 un-excused absences.
Generally, outstanding ('A') students in this class have good attendance
and completed all their assignments on time. They are consistently well
prepared for class, and actively participate in and advance our discussions
with pertinent information, questions, and observations. Their work demonstrate
their awareness of the issues at hand, the historical context for the
film and videos they are discussing, as well as their ability to articulate
their observations and analyses in a clear and concise manner. Only letter
grades are given out in this class.
Academic honesty -
all work done for this course must be the original work of the student
submitting it, and should have been undertaken exclusively for this course.
No work done prior to this class maybe used to fulfill the class assignments.
Extra credit - Students are
encouraged to attend screenings, conferences, lectures, exhibitions and
web events related to this course. Write a two-page (typed and double-spaced)
report of the event or activity. Incorporate the event's relevance to
the class as well as your personal responses to it. Proof of attendance
is required (keep your ticket stubs, programs, etc.) Students are allowed
two extra credit papers. Announcements for events of interest to this
class are done in the first 5 mins. of each class.
* I try my best to make my grading criteria as clear as possible,
and you are welcome to come and discuss your grades and your class performance
with me. However, I only consider legitimate concerns, and be aware that
your grade is as likely to go down as it is to go up after I reassess
your assignment. I do not tolerate haggling, bribing, threats, and any
other pointless arguments. I consider all aspects of your performance
before I assign a grade, please respect my assessment as I respect your
efforts.

Equipment Check-out
Equipment can now be reserved on-line at the Media
Studies web site
Equipment is checked-out/in on Mondays and Thursdays between 9am—10pm
at Scott Hall basement. Equipment that is checked-out must be returned
by 12 noon the day it is due back.
Videotapes and audiotapes for class projects can be purchased at the bookstore,
on-line, or at any good A/V supply store (Ametron, Studio Film & Tape,
etc.) If you go to a supply store or buy on-line, it is usually cheaper
to buy in bulk, so a group of you may want to organize and purchase tapes
together.
* A note on general respect and care: we are all depending on each
other to keep our equipment in good working order. If the equipment breaks
down, no one can complete his or her work! You are responsible for reading
and following rules for equipment usage. Kelly Sears, Eddie Gonzalez or myself may revoke
access privileges at any time if the rules are not followed. Use common
sense and please be considerate of each other: return the equipment on
time.
|
| |

Course Schedule:
Week 1: Introduction + The Audible
Past
Tuesday 1/16
__•Introduction
__•Syllabus
Thursday 1/18
__•General discussion of sound - what
is sound? And what is the study of sound?
__•Ear diagram 1,
2
Reading
Jonathan Sterne, The Audible Past, Introduction;
pp. 1-29
Week 2: The Audible Past (cont.): Machines
to Hear for Them
Tuesday 1/23
Thursday 1/25
Reading
Jonathan Sterne, The Audible Past, Ch.
1, pp. 31-85, Ch.
3 pp. 137-177 (skim)
Screening (1/24, Wednesday, 7pm)
MY FAIR LADY (1964) Dir. George Cukor
Week 3: The Audible Past (cont.): Sound
Technology into Media
Tuesday 1/30
| • |
Sound technology into media |
• |
Fidelity and sound reproduction |
Thursday 2/1
| • |
Fidelity and sound reproduction |
• |
Discussion of STRANGE FRUIT, another perspective on sound reproduction |
Reading
Jonathan Sterne, The Audible Past, Ch.
4, pp. 179-214, (skim) Ch.
5 pp. 215-286
Additional Reading
Roland Barthes, "The Grain of the Voice", in On Record, pp. 293-300
Friedrich Kittler, Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, pp. 21-114
Screening (1/31, Wednesday, 7pm)
STRANGE FRUIT (2002) Dir. Joel Katz, 57 min.
Week 4: Audio-Vision
Tuesday 2/6
| • |
Assignment #1: in-class writing assignment. Compare two audio excerpts and discuss their historical significance based on class readings on histories of sound reproduction. (1-3 pages) |
Recording
STRANGE FRUIT (1940) Music and lyrics by Lewis Allan
Thursday 2/8
| • |
Added value |
| • |
Vococentricism |
| • |
Empathetic vs. anempathetic music |
| • |
Spotting |
| • |
Different modes of listening |
Film
Excerpts from PERSONA (1966) Directed by Ingmar Bergman
Excerpts from PSYCHO (1960) Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Excerpts from HERO (2002) Directed by Zhang Yimou
Excerpts from KISS ME DEADLY (1955) Directed by Robert Aldrich
Reading
Michel Chion, Audio-Vision, pp. 3-34
Additional Reading
Michel Chion, Audio-Vision, pp. 35-94
Week 5: Audio Vision (cont.)
Tuesday 2/13
| • |
Audio visual analysis |
| • |
Masking and forced marriage |
| • |
Standard outline of analysis |
| • |
Example of an audio visual analysis |
Thursday 2/15
| • |
Assignment
#2: take-home assignment. Create an audio visual analysis
of the film clip I show in class based on Chion's model analysis (p.
198) 1-3 pages, typed, double-spaced. |
Film
Excerpts from BLADE RUNNER (1982) Directed by Ridley Scott
Excerpts from PERSONA (1966) Directed by Ingmar Bergman
Reading
Michel Chion, Audio-Vision, pp. 185-213
Additional Reading
Michel Chion, Audio-Vision, pp. 95-137
Screening (2/14, Wednesday, 7pm)
PSYCHO (1960) Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Week 6: The Voice in Cinema
Tuesday 2/20
| • |
Pre-filmic origins of voices
in cinema |
| • |
Voices on the screen and vococentrism |
| • |
Acousmetre |
| • |
The I-voice |
| • |
Nailing and rigging |
Thursday 2/22
| • |
Anacousmetre
|
| • |
Other voices |
Film
Excerpts from 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY (1968) Directed by Stanley Kubrick
Excerpts from THE WIZARD OF OZ (1939) Directed by Victor Fleming
Excerpts from PSYCHO (1960) Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Excerpts from SANS SOLEIL (1982) Directed by Chris Marker
Excerpts from NEWS FROM HOME (1976) Directed by Chantal Akerman
Reading
Michel Chion, The Voice in Cinema, pp.
1-13,
13-29, 49-57,
125-151
Screening (2/21, Wednesday, 7pm)
BLUE (1993) Directed by Derek Jarman
Week 7: Body Talk
Tuesday 2/27
| • |
Freudian and Laconism psychoanalysis
and feminist film theory |
| • |
The voices of women in Hollywood films |
| • |
Sonic vraisemblable |
| • |
Unhinged female voices |
Thursday 3/1
| • |
The screaming point |
| • |
Start thinking about assignment
#4, due in 3 weeks |
Reading
Michel Chion, The Voice in Cinema, pp. 75-79
Kaja Silverman, The Acoustic Mirror, Ch.
1 & 2,
pp. 1-71, (skim Ch. 1) also read pp. 72-79
Additional Reading
David Schwarz, "Lamentation, Abjection, and the Music of Diamanda
Galas," in Listening Subjects pp. 133-163
Recording
PLAGUE MASS (1991) by Diamanda
Galas, tracks 4, 11, 13
Web Site
www.diamandagalas.com,
with video clips of her performances
Film
Excerpts from PSYCHO (1960) Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Excerpts from SINGIN' IN THE RAIN (1951) Directed by Gene Kelly and Stanley
Donen
Excerpts from FRIDAY THE 13TH (1980) Directed by Sean Cunningham
Excerpts from SORRY, WRONG NUMBER (1948) Directed by Anatole Litvak
Screening (2/28, Wednesday, 7pm)
SINGIN' IN THE RAIN (1951) Directed by Gene Kelly and Stanley
Donen
Week 8: The Fantasy of the Maternal Voice
Tuesday 3/6
| • |
Fantasy of entrapment (Chion) |
| • |
Fantasy of interiority (Kristeva's concept
of the chora) |
| • |
Motherhood in feminist film - Laura Mulvey's
"voice-off" |
Thursday 3/8
| • |
Assignment #3: Perform a psychoanalytic reading of the film clip based on some of the concepts
we have been discussing in class. 3-5 pages, typed, double-spaced. |
Reading
Kaja Silverman, The Acoustic Mirror, Ch. 3
& 4,
pp. 72-140
Film
Excerpts from DIVA (1981) Directed by Jean-Jacques Beineix
Excerpts from RIDDLES OF THE SPHINX (1981) Directed by Laura Mulvey and
Peter Wollen
Screening (3/7, Wednesday, 7pm)
RIDDLES OF THE SPHINX (1981) Directed by Laura Mulvey and
Peter Wollen, plus PLAGUE MASS recording by Diamanda Galas (optional)
Week 9: Spring Break
Week 10: Sound Theory, Sound Practice
Tuesday 3/20 * We will be having class today in a number of different
places, please come on time so you will know where we are going.
| • |
Cinema as text |
| • |
Cinema as event |
| • |
Sound as event |
| • |
Groups formed for class activity on 3/30
and assignment #5, due in 3 weeks |
| • |
Abstracts/treatments for final
project or paper due today |
Thursday 3/22
| • |
In-class
presentations of assignment #4 |
Reading
Rick Altman, Sound Theory/Sound Practice, pp. 1-31
No screening this week
Week 11: Sound and Space
Tuesday 3/27
| • |
In-class presentations of
assignment #4 (cont.) |
Thursday 3/29
| • |
Group activity: Each group
will choose an alternative spaces and set up a recording context for
part of today's class. Excerpts of these recordings will be played
back at the end of class back in the classroom. Each group should email me before class with their choice of space. |
Reading
Rick Altman, Sound Theory/Sound Practice, pp. 35-64
Additional Reading
Michel Chion, Audio-Vision, pp. 66-94
Henri Lefebvre, The Production of Space, Ch. 1-4, pp. 1-291
Listening (3/28, Wednesday, 7pm)
STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENTS (2000) BY Ultra Red
Week 12: The Soundscape
Tuesday 4/3
| • |
From nature to rural soundscapes |
| • |
Sacred noise theory |
Thursday 4/5
| • |
Urban, industrial to electronic soundscapes |
| • |
Sound imperialism |
| • |
Flat line in sound |
| • |
Schizophonia |
Reading
R. Murray Schafer, The Soundscape, Ch. 1-6, pp. 15-99
Audio
SECOND NATURE (1999) by Ultra Red, tracks 2, 3, 4
Screening (4/4, Wednesday, 7pm)
SONIC OUTLAWS (1995) Directed by Craig Baldwin
Week 13: The Soundscape (cont.)
Tuesday 4/10
| • |
Discuss SONIC OUTLAWS, finish discussion of The Soundscape |
Thursday 4/12
| • |
In-class presentations of assignment #5
|
Reading
R. Murray Schafer, The Soundscape, Ch. 1-6, pp. 15-99
Week 14: Sound, Ethnography, & Colonialism
Tuesday 4/17
| • |
In-class presentations of assignment #5 |
| • |
Colonial phonography; His Master's Voice 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 |
Thursday 4/19
| • |
The 'magic' of sound reproduction |
| • |
Fidelity and mimesis |
Reading
R. Murray Schafer, The Soundscape, Ch.
7, 14, 15 pp. 103-119, 205-225
Michael Taussig, Mimesis and Alterity, Ch.
4-5, pp. 193-235
Additional Reading
R. Murray Schafer, The Soundscape, Ch. 16-18, pp. 226-259
Jonathan Sterne, The Audible Past, Ch. 6, pp. 287-333
Film
Excerpts from NANOOK OF THE NORTH (1922) Directed by Robert Flaherty
Excerpts from FITZCARRALDO (1982) Directed by Werner Herzog
Screening (4/18, Wednesday, 7pm)
THE TAILENDERS (2005) Directed by Adele Horne
Week 15: Silence
Tuesday 4/24
Thursday 4/26
| • |
John Cage |
| • |
Trouble shooting for final projects |
Reading
John Cage, Silence, pp. 3-6,
109-127,
261-273
No screening this week
Week 16: Troubleshooting + Class Wrap-up
Tuesday 5/1 and Thursday 5/3
| • |
Trouble shooting for final
projects |
| • |
Papers and projects due |
| • |
Wrap-up |
| • |
Class evaluations |
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