In _Why Do People Sing?_ Paddy Scannell explores some of the
mysteries at the heart of vocal communication. What explains the
communicative musicality of the voices between parent and child as a
baby learns to talk? Can readers of fiction hear the voices of authors
and characters within soundless written texts? How has radio affected
voice, talk, music, and singing, and how has it made them public in
new ways? And by putting the voice into recordings, to what extent
have broadcasting technologies provided a radically new resource for
historians? These questions and more are explored in the first three
chapters. In the final chapter, Scannell boldly puts into words the
inexpressible experience of listening to singing, wherein the glory of
the human voice finds its purest expression.
This highly original book makes a distinctive intervention by
stressing the inherently positive qualities of talk (rather than
language) as the basis for communication. Concise and beautifully
written, it is suitable for students and scholars of media,
communication, and other disciplines across the humanities, as well as
general readers with an interest in this fascinating topic.
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On Voice
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781509529452
Publisert
2019
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Polity
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter