The Place of ListeningJohn Puterbaugh, 1999 |
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In geography, a distinction is made between place and location.
A location is a point in space designated by some set of objective, pre-defined
criteria or convention. For example, Princeton, New Jersey is located
in the Western Hemisphere at 40.5 degrees latitude and 74.3 degrees longitude,
or the Red Top diner is located two miles south of the train station on
Route 20. In other words, location is essentially a set of functional
relations (See Entrikin 1991). The world of functional locations is the
physical world where scientific theorizing takes place; a world which
Thomas Nagel (1987) refers to as a view from nowhere. The timbre spaces produced by, for example, multi-dimensional scaling
(MDS) studies attempt to create a view from nowhere out of a set
of judgements. MDS is successful because the context is so limited. MDS
studies control both sides of the formation of these spaces. On the one
hand, the stimulus is controlled single tones are carefully constructed
with a specific duration, pitch, loudness, and an exact number of harmonics.
On the other hand, the classifications of judgements are reduced to a
numeric scale that must correlate with the perceived dissimilarity between
pairs of sounds. Although the resulting information provides insight on
how listeners make pair-wise judgements in confined situations, it does
not capture important aspects of the particular timbres involved. Because the notion of place (subjectivity) is so personal it resists any attempt at naming or describing its quality. The fact that a quality cannot be named does not mean
that it is vague This is one problem with describing what and how we as
individuals hear the sonic world the ineffable quality of sound
and music. Place is the space of subjectivity, the ineffable world of
quality. Location is the space of objectivity, the generic world driven
by abstraction and functionality. Understanding timbre involves choosing
a standpoint between location and place. Alexander, C. (1979) The Timeless Way of Building. New York: Oxford University Press. Entrikin, J.N. (1991) The Betweenness of Place: Towards a Geography of Modernity. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press. Nagel, T. (1986) The View From Nowhere. New York: Oxford University Press. |
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© 1999 John Puterbaugh |
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