Date of Award
2015
Document Type
Thesis
Degree Name
Bachelors
Department
Humanities
First Advisor
Clark, Maribeth
Keywords
New College of Florida, Soundmaps, Website
Area of Concentration
General Studies
Abstract
This text is an exegesis written in accompaniment to the development of the New College Soundmap. The origin and development of soundmap practice and the emergence and development of related environmental sound practices are detailed. The exegesis concludes with an exposition of the development of the New College Soundmap itself. Soundmap practice emerged from the sonic explorations of the World Soundscape Project, who coming out of Simon Fraser University of Burnaby, British Columbia, pioneered the first soundmaps in the early 1970s. From its origins soundmap practice has spread and developed into its current form as a new media practice. This thesis deals with the development of a regional web-based soundmap for New College. Various discursive strains from media studies, sonic arts, and phenomenological philosophy are woven together to explain the impetus and value of soundmap practice and related environmental sound practices such as soundwalks and site-listening. The thesis ends with a critical analysis of successes and failures of the project towards its stated goal: to facilitate awareness of an engagement with the local sound environment.
Recommended Citation
Amos, Sarah Elizabeth Janeway, "DEVELOPING THE NEW COLLEGE SOUNDMAP: TOWARD A LOCAL LISTENING COMMUNITY" (2015). Theses & ETDs. 4979.
https://digitalcommons.ncf.edu/theses_etds/4979