声音故事,感官人种学,带着受伤的心灵倾听

M. Charette, Elizabeth Lima, Denielle Elliott
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引用次数: 0

摘要

脑损伤会改变一个人的声音。接下来是两个声音故事。这些简短的音频组合旨在将听者带入脑损伤前和脑损伤后的感觉环境中,这是一个有纹理和具体化的景观,没有受伤的人,包括大多数临床医生,几乎没有理解。这种理解的缺乏是由于传统科学中所做的各种神经学研究往往没有对某些形式的感觉现象进行研究,并排除了病人的声音。我们从蕾切尔·科尔布(Rachel Kolb, 2017)在植入人工耳蜗后第一次听到音乐的第一人称叙述中获得灵感。她写道,音乐以她无法解释的方式震撼了她的内心。与其说“你能听到音乐吗?”,她更喜欢被问到:“音乐对你来说是什么感觉?”从两个脑损伤患者的视角出发(在这里被称为故事A和故事B),这些声音故事询问脑损伤听起来像什么?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sonic stories, sensory ethnography, and listening with an injured mind
Brain injuries transform how one’s world sounds. What follows are two sonic stories. These short audio compositions are designed to transport the listener into the pre- and post-brain injury sensory environment—a textured and embodied landscape that non-injured minded individuals, including most clinicians, have little understanding of. This lack of understanding is a consequence of the sorts of neurological research done in the scientific traditions which tend to leave certain forms of sensory phenomena unstudied and exclude patients’ voices. We draw inspiration from Rachel Kolb’s (2017) first-person account of hearing music for the first time after getting cochlear implants. She writes that music jolted her core in ways she could not explain. Instead of “Can you hear the music?”, she prefers to be asked, “What does music feel like to you?” Stemming from the perspectives of two individuals that live with brain injuries (identified here as Story A and Story B), these sonic stories ask what does a brain injury sound like?
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