Remixing Relationality: 'Other/ed' Sonic Modernities of our Present

Far from simply playing music, the turntable has, in recent decades, been transformed into a musical instrument. Those that play these new instruments, called Turntablists, alter existing sounds to produce new sonic arrangements, exceeding the assumed use value of the turntable. The turntable’s tr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Campbell, Mark V.
Other Authors: Walcott, Rinaldo
Language:en_ca
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/32928
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spelling ndltd-TORONTO-oai-tspace.library.utoronto.ca-1807-329282013-04-19T19:54:41ZRemixing Relationality: 'Other/ed' Sonic Modernities of our PresentCampbell, Mark V.AfrodiasporicBlack CanadaFar from simply playing music, the turntable has, in recent decades, been transformed into a musical instrument. Those that play these new instruments, called Turntablists, alter existing sounds to produce new sonic arrangements, exceeding the assumed use value of the turntable. The turntable’s transformation from record player to instrument captures one of the ways in which Afrosonic sound making activities refuse to conform to existing paradigms of music making in the western world. Throughout the African diaspora, it has been the musics from various regions and nations that continually capture the attention of the world’s music connoisseurs. This dissertation examines the ways in which careful consideration of the sonic innovations in Afrodiasporic cultures produce alternative paradigms through which we might analyze contemporary life. The following chapters interrogate turntablism, remix culture and hip hop music as subtexts that elaborate a foundational narrative of Afrodiasporic life. These subtexts are used as tools to examine the various ethnoscapes of Black Canadian life, official multiculturalism and notions of home within the African diaspora in Canada. The dominant narrative of the African diaspora explored in this work, housed within the sonic, elaborates a relational conception of freedom and modernity born out of the particularities of Afrodiasporic life in the west. In this sonic narrative, participation becomes the key index by which freedom is understood, embodied and enacted. Consequently, a notion of relationality, deeply indebted to the Afrodiasporic experience, is utilized throughout this dissertation to access a conception of the human that lay outside of western Europe’s enlightenment definition.Walcott, Rinaldo2010-112012-09-05T12:58:36ZWITHHELD_ONE_YEAR2012-09-05T12:58:36Z2012-09-05Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/32928en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Afrodiasporic
Black Canada
spellingShingle Afrodiasporic
Black Canada
Campbell, Mark V.
Remixing Relationality: 'Other/ed' Sonic Modernities of our Present
description Far from simply playing music, the turntable has, in recent decades, been transformed into a musical instrument. Those that play these new instruments, called Turntablists, alter existing sounds to produce new sonic arrangements, exceeding the assumed use value of the turntable. The turntable’s transformation from record player to instrument captures one of the ways in which Afrosonic sound making activities refuse to conform to existing paradigms of music making in the western world. Throughout the African diaspora, it has been the musics from various regions and nations that continually capture the attention of the world’s music connoisseurs. This dissertation examines the ways in which careful consideration of the sonic innovations in Afrodiasporic cultures produce alternative paradigms through which we might analyze contemporary life. The following chapters interrogate turntablism, remix culture and hip hop music as subtexts that elaborate a foundational narrative of Afrodiasporic life. These subtexts are used as tools to examine the various ethnoscapes of Black Canadian life, official multiculturalism and notions of home within the African diaspora in Canada. The dominant narrative of the African diaspora explored in this work, housed within the sonic, elaborates a relational conception of freedom and modernity born out of the particularities of Afrodiasporic life in the west. In this sonic narrative, participation becomes the key index by which freedom is understood, embodied and enacted. Consequently, a notion of relationality, deeply indebted to the Afrodiasporic experience, is utilized throughout this dissertation to access a conception of the human that lay outside of western Europe’s enlightenment definition.
author2 Walcott, Rinaldo
author_facet Walcott, Rinaldo
Campbell, Mark V.
author Campbell, Mark V.
author_sort Campbell, Mark V.
title Remixing Relationality: 'Other/ed' Sonic Modernities of our Present
title_short Remixing Relationality: 'Other/ed' Sonic Modernities of our Present
title_full Remixing Relationality: 'Other/ed' Sonic Modernities of our Present
title_fullStr Remixing Relationality: 'Other/ed' Sonic Modernities of our Present
title_full_unstemmed Remixing Relationality: 'Other/ed' Sonic Modernities of our Present
title_sort remixing relationality: 'other/ed' sonic modernities of our present
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/32928
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