Ecology and Environmentalism in Contemporary Sound Art

Type
Thesis
Authors
Gilmurray ( Jonathan Gilmurray )
 
Category
Thesis  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
2018 
Publisher
University of the Arts London, United Kingdom 
URL
[ private ] 
Abstract
PhD Thesis

In recent years, ecological issues have grown to become some of the most significant sociopolitical concerns of our time – something which has been reflected by an explosion in engagement with such issues across every area of arts and culture. Across most major art forms, this trend has been identified, analysed and promoted both by critical studies in the growing field of ecocriticism, and by the curatorial recognition of new ‘ecological’ genres; however, to date there has been no equivalent ecologically-focused engagement within sound art. This can be recognised as the product of two significant gaps in sound art scholarship: the first critical in nature, regarding the lack of ecocritical engagement with sound art; and the second curatorial, regarding the failure to recognise the growing number of ecologically-engaged works of sound art as a distinct genre in their own right.

The research detailed within this thesis will address each of these gaps by conducting a comprehensive investigation into ecology and environmentalism in contemporary sound art. The critical gap will be tackled by coupling a thorough analysis of the field of ecocriticism with an investigation into the ways in which ecological principles manifest within sound as a medium and listening as a means of engagement. This will then be used to develop a new ecocritical framework specifically designed for sound art, which will be employed to conduct ecocritical listenings to a selection of canonical and contemporary sound works. To address the curatorial gap, meanwhile, a new genre of ‘ecological sound art’ will be proposed, with a second set of ecocritical listenings focused upon a selection of ecological sound works in order to determine the precise nature of their ecological engagement, and to develop both a comprehensive definition and an initial catalogue of works for this important and timely contemporary movement. 
Description
https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/13705/1/Jonathan%20Gilmurray_PhD%20Thesis_FINAL%20SUBMISSION.pdf 
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