Plainly Audible

IF 0.5 3区 艺术学 0 MUSIC
Alison Martin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article tells the story of the Amplified Noise Act of 2018, a bill introduced through Washington, DC’s council to discourage street musicians in DC’s Chinatown neighborhood from disturbing local residents and office workers in the area. The punitive measures proposed in the bill included a $300 fine, up to ten days in jail, and/or the seizing of the offending equipment by the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD). The public hearing, protests, and legislative maneuvering that followed encapsulate the racialized and sonic dimensions of gentrification in Washington, DC. I introduce these events through a theoretical framework that I call “intersectional listening.” Drawing on the work of Kimberlé Crenshaw and intellectual genealogies of Black feminist thought, intersectional listening attends to the sonically articulated expressions of identity that are present in processes of gentrification, producing an analysis that attends to the complexities of sound, power, and race in a changing city. Processes of gentrification amplify tensions surrounding sound, music, and noise in both public and private space, and these tensions are deeply racialized because of the ways in which Black people have long been deemed sonically unruly and unmanageable. Ultimately, this article works to decriminalize Black sound and amplify those striving to do the same.
清晰可听
这篇文章告诉了2018年《放大噪音法案》的故事,该法案是通过华盛顿特区议会提出的,旨在阻止华盛顿唐人街附近的街头音乐家干扰该地区的当地居民和办公室工作人员。该法案中提出的惩罚措施包括300美元的罚款、最高10天的监禁和/或伦敦警察局没收违规设备。随后的公开听证会、抗议活动和立法行动概括了华盛顿特区中产阶级化的种族化和声音层面。我通过一个我称之为“交叉倾听”的理论框架来介绍这些事件。根据KimberléCrenshaw的工作和黑人女权主义思想的知识谱系,交叉倾听关注士绅化过程中存在的身份的声音表达,产生一种关注声音复杂性的分析,权力和种族在一个不断变化的城市。绅士化的过程放大了公共和私人空间中围绕声音、音乐和噪音的紧张关系,这些紧张关系被深深地种族化,因为黑人长期以来被认为在声音上不守规矩,难以控制。最终,这篇文章致力于将黑人声音合法化,并扩大那些努力做到这一点的人。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: Journal of Popular Music Studies is a peer-reviewed journal dedicated to research on popular music throughout the world and approached from a variety of positions. Now published four times a year, each issue features essays and reviews, as well as roundtables and creative works inspired by popular music.
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