Course's Focus: Waves of Power

Anthropologist has found sound as worthy of study as text or images.

Professor Teaching

Anthropology professor Amanda Weidman 鈥92鈥攚hose research has focused mainly on music, media, and performance in South Asia鈥攈as in recent years broadened her interest beyond traditional notions of music.


鈥淔rom the chants of protesters to the hum of engines, from the ring of church bells to the background tracks of our favorite songs, sound matters. It is not just a background to what we see, but a crucial and powerful part of social life. Sound, whether produced deliberately or as a byproduct of other activities, has effects which are often tangible, material, and political.鈥

That鈥檚 how Weidman introduces Waves of Power: The Anthropology and Cultural Politics of Sound, offered for the first time this past fall.

鈥淎 lot of researchers in ethnomusicology and related fields are starting to leave aside 鈥榤usic鈥 as a framework and think instead about the broader concept of sound,鈥 says Weidman. 鈥淯sing sound as a category is very freeing. It allows you to talk about music in ways that recognize its social and political embeddedness.鈥

Weidman wanted students to realize that sound is just as worthy of academic study as written texts and visual images, but she also made sure that, along with that intellectual content, the course had practical components.

鈥淔or part of the class, we鈥檙e thinking about, reading about, and writing about sound. And for the other part, we鈥檙e working with sound鈥攔ecording it, editing it, and making a piece that says something through the medium of sound,鈥 explains Weidman.

The biggest surprise for Weidman was her students鈥 creativity in producing the sound projects she assigned. One student recorded the sound of the treadmill she was working out on and showed how the machine鈥檚 various pitches were a sonic expression of such culturally salient issues as the obsession with fitness and body image.

Some students used sound recording as a medium for ethnographic documentation, and others focused on how sound recordings are constructed to give a sense of reality. One recorded the sounds of services at two synagogues to explore how the differences in Orthodox and Reform Judaism were reflected in the contrasting sounds. Another used the final project to construct a natural-鈥╯ounding soundscape and then deconstructed it piece by piece.

鈥淲hen you teach a course for the first time, it鈥檚 experimental, and it鈥檚 interesting to see what students come up with,鈥 says Weidman.

鈥淭hey鈥檝e given me ideas for how I might guide the class the next time.鈥

Surround Sound

鈥淪ound is there; it鈥檚 shaping us all the time,鈥 says Weidman, 鈥渂ut we don鈥檛 often pay much attention to it or treat it in an intellectual way.鈥

Required Reading

Matt Sakakeeny鈥檚 Roll With It looks at New Orleans brass bands and the tension between the musicians鈥 sonic claims to urban space and their exploitation by the tourist industry.

Noise vs. Sound

鈥淲e had talked about noise as a constructed category and the fact that what鈥檚 thought of as noise and what鈥檚 thought of as a good sound is always a political, social, and cultural matter.鈥

Japanoise

When UC Santa Barbara Professor David Novak, who has written an ethnography of Japanese 鈥渘oise music,鈥 visited the class, students were asked to consider how noise can challenge assumptions about 鈥済ood鈥 and 鈥渂ad鈥 sounds.

Published on: 03/17/2017