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Distributed for NIAS Press

Hearing Southeast Asia

Sounds of Hierarchy and Power in Context

Distributed for NIAS Press

Hearing Southeast Asia

Sounds of Hierarchy and Power in Context

There is no moment of our waking life in which we do not experience sounds or make sounds. The human body is a sound-making organism. In densely peopled areas like many parts of Southeast Asia, then, the potential is for tumult, an infinity of different sounds competing to be heard. Pandemonium is not unheard of in Southeast Asia – not least in times of political unrest – but in everyday situations uproar is uncommon; cultural, social, political and personal factors (among others) work to calm, channel or even silence the tumult. Providing focus to this interdisciplinary volume on sound in Southeast Asia are detailed descriptions of the context of sounds and sound-making within the region’s diverse socio-cultural semiotic frames of hierarchy and power. Drawing on examples from Myanmar, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines, each author discusses some aspect of sound in relation to their ethnographic context. Sound examples are also found on a companion website. Varied approaches to understanding sound are offered but in some way each relates to hierarchy and power. All show the importance of sound for understanding the processual implementation of hierarchy (or its opposite) in the construction of the social environment and the role of sound in the efficacious engagement of power in a variety of religious and political form. This is a much-needed volume. Those scholars working in sound studies and adjoining fields focused outside the West (e.g. ethnomusicology, anthropology), have long known that the field of sound studies is firmly Eurocentric. This long-overdue study of sound in Southeast Asia not only offers non-Western perspectives; it also goes beyond examining sound in isolation, considering this instead in relation to the other senses and to sociocultural constructions. In such ways, then, the volume offers new directions of study, an exciting prospect.

352 pages | 20, 1 map | 5.98 x 9.02 | © 2019

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Reviews

“In chapter 1 of [this book], Porath aligns the fields of sound studies and ethnomusicology by outlining the theoretical strands of scholarship that influence both disciplines. For those wanting a useful summary of the intersection of these two fields, this chapter is invaluable, and I highly recommend it…. [Chapter 8 by Andrew McGraw] is the most comprehensive discussion of the role of the gong that I have come across in the literature thus far. The chapter presents a comprehensive discussion of how gamelan musical structures reflect ideas of power in other domains of cultural life (p. 259 and elsewhere). For this, I highly commend this chapter, particularly to teachers of Indonesian music outside Indonesia.”

Musicology Australia

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