Histories with Sound: Using Noise and Music to Teach (and Research) the Gilded Age and Progressive Era

Samuel E. Backer
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Abstract

Abstract In recent years, the history of sound has developed into a rich body of interdisciplinary scholarship. This article explores the benefits of considering sonic evidence alongside a host of other material; teaching and writing histories with—rather than of—sound. In the classroom, this kind of “history with sound” is particularly useful for its ability to cut across lines of scholarly inquiry. This makes sound an especially potent resource when teaching the history of the United States during the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. During these years, American society underwent a many-sided process of development difficult to adequately narrativize. The study of sound, with its ability to link numerous trends and dynamics within densely layered events, can help address this issue. Providing insight into the practices and problems of everyday life, such sonic history can reveal the interplay of change and continuity that defined the social experience of the turn-of-the-century United States. Focused on sound in New York, this article provides an overview of the topic’s historiography before examining a series of distinct case studies for classroom use.
有声的历史:利用噪音和音乐来教学(和研究)镀金时代和进步时代
摘要 近年来,声音史已发展成为一个丰富的跨学科学术体系。本文探讨了将声音证据与大量其他材料一起考虑的益处;用声音而非声音来教学和撰写历史。在课堂上,这种 "有声历史 "特别有用,因为它能够跨越学术研究的界限。因此,在讲授镀金时代和进步时代的美国历史时,声音是一种特别有效的资源。在这些年里,美国社会经历了一个难以充分叙述的多方面发展过程。声音研究能够将层层叠叠的事件中的众多趋势和动态联系起来,有助于解决这一问题。通过深入了解日常生活的实践和问题,这种声音史可以揭示变化和连续性的相互作用,而这种相互作用决定了世纪之交美国的社会经验。本文以纽约的声音为重点,概述了这一主题的历史学,然后探讨了一系列供课堂使用的独特案例研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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