闲暇聆听:合唱培养理解力

Q1 Arts and Humanities
A. Holba
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引用次数: 2

摘要

如今,在我们这个节奏快、技术集成、全球复杂的环境中,倾听可能很困难,但我不相信这是一门失传的艺术——我们只需要找到一种方法,在一片干扰和纠缠的海洋中,重新定位和重新我们的美感,这些干扰和纠缠阻碍了我们倾听、观察、反思和行动的能力。我们知道,我们的注意力持续受到各种现象的攻击,尤其是在拥挤的城市,以及旨在为我们提供即时满足感的技术的攻击(Jackson,2009)。即使当我们逃离这些分散注意力的环境时,也需要很长时间才能感到放松或不匆忙,或者我们不知道如何放松或放慢速度(Honore,2009)。听力作为一门艺术是一种有挑战的实践,但我们可以用心克服它们。随着时间的推移,我们对倾听的理解发生了变化;它也受到了渗透存在的复杂技术环境的进步的挑战(Nichols,2009)。在分心的土地上,在表象、消失的网络中理解倾听,以及在存在和不存在的情况下协商听觉感知,我们面前有艰巨的工作。即使在这种情况下,我们也会被文本和图像的干扰轰炸,这些干扰只会给我们一部分真实的东西。听声音、参与听觉不应该再是最后的手段,也不应该退居我们其他感官的后面。虽然我们知道文本和图像有其局限性和欺骗性,但听觉感知可以增强我们的交际理解,并填充更多的画面或上下文,从而拓宽我们的意识和理解。不过,这并不容易。这个问题突出了听的空间维度。空间维度不仅在听力语境中很重要,而且通过休闲的空间维度来理解听力可以扩大理解,并确保解释的可能性不断发展并保持开放,而不是缩小到具体封闭的地步。探索本卷每一篇投稿文章中的空间性线索,并通过希腊哲学的视角考虑空间维度,可以打开我们对休闲空间中倾听的理解。古希腊人并没有对空间和地点进行有力的区分,但他们确实提到了三个空间概念:topos、chora和kenon(Lenhart,2011)。亚里士多德把拓扑学理解为指一个特定的地方。另一方面,Chora指的是一种普遍的地方感(Lenhart,2011)。Kenon指的是空间的无空间或空虚(Lenhart,2011)。尽管topos表示一个特定的地方,但它并不能提供一种
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
LISTENING IN LEISURE: ENACTING CHORA TO CULTIVATE UNDERSTANDING
Listening can be difficult in our face-paced, technology-integrated, globally sophisticated environment these days but I am not convinced that it is a lost art—we just need to find a way to reorient and reengage our aesthetic sensibilities amidst a sea of distractions and entanglements that dissuade our capacities to listen, observe, reflect, and act. We know that our attention spans are constantly under attack from a variety of phenomena especially in crowded cities and from technologies designed to serve us with instant satisfactions (Jackson, 2009). Even when we escape these distracting environments, it takes a long time to feel relaxed or not rushed or we do not know how to relax or slow down (Honore, 2009). Listening as an art is a practice that has its challenges, but we can mindfully overcome them. Our understanding of listening has evolved and shifted over time; it has also been challenged by advancements in the complex technological landscapes that permeate existence (Nichols, 2009). In the land of distractions, understanding listening within a web of appearances, disappearances, as well as negotiating auditory perceptions within presences and absences, we have hard work before us. Even within this landscape, we are bombarded with text and image distractions that only give us part of what is real. Listening to sound, engaging in an auditory sense should no longer be a last resort or take a back seat to our other senses. While we know text and images have their own limits and deceptions, auditory perceptions can enhance our communicative understandings and fill in more of the picture or context so we broaden our awareness and understanding. Though, this is not easy. This issue foregrounds proxemics, the spatial dimensions of listening. Spatial dimensions not only matter in listening contexts but understanding listening through the spatial dimension of leisure allows for expanded comprehension and ensures interpretive possibilities evolve and remain open instead of narrowing to the point of concretely closing. Exploring the threads of spatiality in each of the contributor essays in this volume and considering spatial dimensions through the lens of Greek philosophy can open our understanding of listening in the space of leisure. The Ancient Greeks did not make a strong distinction between space and place but they did refer to three conceptions of space: topos, chora, and kenon (Lenhart, 2011). Aristotle understood topos as referring to a particular place or location. Chora, on the other hand, referred to a general sense of place (Lenhart, 2011). Kenon refers to nonspace or emptiness of space (Lenhart, 2011). Even though topos denotes a specific place, it does not provide a sense of an
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来源期刊
International Journal of Listening
International Journal of Listening Arts and Humanities-Language and Linguistics
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
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