Introduction 1 Voice 2 Vocal Injustice 3 The Ethics of Envoicing 4 The Gendered Voice 5 Envoicing in Sex, Maternity, and Childbirth 6 Ethical Spotlight: Envoicing in Voice Pedagogy 7 Ethical Spotlight: Envoicing in/and Philosophy Conclusion: Shifting Vocal Soundscapes in the Age of Trump and Covid-19 Bibliography Index
Marrying practical and the theoretical approaches, Sounding Bodies: Identity, Injustice, and the Voice cuts across philosophy and voice/speech training to present a powerful model of the ways in which theoretical and practical knowledge in this sphere can inform one another.
Ann J. Cahill is a Professor of Philosophy at Elon University, US, and is the author of Overcoming Objectification: A Carnal Ethics (2010) and Rethinking Rape (2001). Her research interests lie in the intersection between feminist theory and philosophy of the body, and she has published on topics such as miscarriage, beautification and sexual assault. Christine Hamel is an Assistant Professor of Voice and Speech and Acting at Boston University’s School of Theatre, US, where she teaches speech and dialects, voice, music theatre and a psycho-physical approach to acting. She is a professional actor, voice/dialect coach and director whose credits include work on Broadway, Off-Broadway, and in regional theatre. At Boston University, Christine is the director of Femina Shakes, a laboratory of intentional experimentation with sex and gender and their impact on interpretations of Shakespeare’s plays. She is a Designated Linklater Voice Teacher, a Michael Chekhov Technique Certified Instructor and a member of Actors’ Equity.
An engaging and timely text and an important contribution to the
emergent field of voice studies. It offers an alternative way to
think and talk about voice that the reader could then translate
into ways of working with and training actors’ voices … I encourage
every voice trainer and coach to keep a copy on their bookshelf and
refer to it often.
*Voice and Speech Review*
In compelling and intricately argued ways, the authors make a
resounding case for understanding how vocal sonority is intrinsic
to self-identity and self-reception. Inter-vocal sonority is shown
to be crucial for social and political justice and a vital element
in the repair of ravaged cultural landscapes. Required reading.
*Jane Boston, Principal Lecturer, Voice Studies, Royal Central
School of Speech and Drama, UK*
This book is the first to bring the vibrant transdisciplinarity of
sound studies together with contemporary philosophy. A marvelously
materialist philosophy of voice, the book lays out a philosophy of
voicing, breathing, and listening; it equips the reader with timely
new concepts, including intervocality, unjust soundscapes, and the
sonorous sonic voice itself.
*Professor Ada Jaarsma, Mount Royal University, Canada*
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