This is yet another delightful read on sonic agency by Brandon LaBelle, highlighting this time what is at stake when we think of social and political transformation as an acoustic question. In <i>Acoustic Justice</i>, LaBelle takes the readers through thrilling discussions on ‘hearing differently,’ on ‘generous infrastructure’ and ‘relating otherwise’ – all of them involved in reconfiguring our capacity to act politically. LaBelle's unique approach offers insight into the temporal and situational realms of sound and listening that are fleeting yet necessary for any process of reimagining political possibilities. In the world today, marked by intense structural feelings of uncertainty and fragility, his theorizing of an impersonal, distributed, and collaborative political agency is not just refreshing but indeed very much needed. This book resonates across various fields of social sciences and humanities and is an essential reading for those interested in political theory, sound studies, resistance, and affect theory.
Ana Hofman, Senior Research Fellow, Research Centre of Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Slovenia
Brandon LaBelle’s <i>Acoustic Justice </i>makes important contributions to the scholarship on sound, politics and the public sphere. Exploring how listening as a form of attentiveness functions in an arena of sonic agency, LaBelle deftly illustrates how an acoustic justice exercises a democratic collective action. This is a non-state form of democracy with the capacity to bring into being an extrajudicial civic body, one with greater capacity for what he calls ‘hearing differently.’ Hearing differently accounts for differences in what is or can be heard as a result of silences, gaps, deafnesses, or absences. Offering up acoustics as a metric for both material and social relations, LaBelle dynamically reads the encounter between the organic and built environments as a ‘distribution of the heard’ invigorating our understanding of the <i>polis</i> as a social acoustic phenomenon.
Roshanak Kheshti, Associate Professor of Ethnic Studies, University of California, San Diego, USA
Labelle is such a playful and expansive thinker<i>. Acoustic Justice</i> draws so much together across art, philosophy, activism, and beyond to sound an urgent intervention in the politics of attention: a commitment both to hearing differently and to hearing difference. This is an account of acoustics unbound from the audible and an account of justice just 'to the side of law,' that migrates in and out of the legal system and insists on the need for a fair hearing 'in the space of the ordinary.'
James E K Parker, author of Acoustic Jurisprudence: Listening to the Trial of Simon Bikindi (2015)
1. Holding, Healing, Attending: Towards Collaborative Living
2. Acoustic Performativity: Practices of Composition
3. Poetic Ecologies: Resonance, Imagination, Repair
4. Skin-Work: Queer Acoustics, Borderspaces, Economies of Desire
5. Deaf Attention: Peripheral Visions, Spatial Meanings, Sensory Politics
6. Acoustic Support