非殖民化回声:丽贝卡·贝尔莫的声音表演中的声音和聆听

I. Blake
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章聚焦于加拿大移民的背景,分析了阿尼什纳贝艺术家丽贝卡·贝尔莫尔的两件互动作品,这些作品制定了殖民时期对声音和倾听的理解的替代方案,这些理解以人的耳朵和发声器官为中心。特别地,我分析了Ayum-ee-aawach Oomama-mowan:对他们的母亲说话(1991),贝尔莫尔建造了一个大型木制扩音器,让参与者直接对着土地说话,以及波浪之声(2017),贝尔莫尔在加拿大国家公园和保护区安装了四个雕塑式的听筒,邀请游客倾听土地。通过对这两种重复表演的分析,我研究了回声如何作为一种非殖民化的姿态和多感官(重新)映射发挥作用,这种映射可以产生现代性空间-时间-感官秩序的替代方案,并扰乱声音的殖民性。通过对声音研究和本土女权主义理论的批判性研究,我提出发声和倾听可以被理解为人与空间/时间之间的一系列社会关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Decolonial Echoes: Voicing and Listening in Rebecca Belmore's Sound Performance
Focusing on the Canadian settler context, this article analyzes two of Anishinaabe artist Rebecca Belmore’s interactive works that enact alternatives to colonial understandings of voicing and listening that have centred the human ear and vocal apparatus. In particular, I analyze Ayum-ee-aawach Oomama-mowan: Speaking to Their Mother (1991), where Belmore constructed a large wooden megaphone for participants to speak into and address the land directly, and Wave Sound (2017), where Belmore installed four sculptural listening tubes in Canadian National Park and reserve sites that invited visitors to listen to the land. Through my analysis of these two iterative performances, I examine how the echo functions as a decolonial gesture and multisensorial (re)mapping that can generate alternatives to modernity’s spatial-temporal-sensorial order and unsettle the coloniality of the voice. Engaging critical work in sound studies and Native feminist theories to think about vibration, I propose that voicing and listening can be understood as a set of social relationships between people and space/time.
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