Intersectional Listening
Gentrification and Black Sonic Life in Washington, DC
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 31 March 2025
- ISBN 9780197671566
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages256 pages
- Size 235x156 mm
- Weight 494 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 13 color images, 10 b/w figures 650
Categories
Short description:
What does gentrification sound like? In Intersectional Listening, author Allie Martin engages this question in Washington, DC, asking how Black people experience gentrification as a sonic, racialized process. Drawing from music, interviews, soundscape recordings, and more, Martin argues that gentrification ultimately serves to silence some voices and amplify others.
MoreLong description:
Gentrification is often considered through a visual lens, where development, progress, and neighborhood change are observed. But what does gentrification sound like? In Intersectional Listening, author Allie Martin engages this question in Washington, DC, asking how Black people experience gentrification as a sonic, racialized process. Drawing from music, interviews, soundscape recordings, and more, Martin argues that gentrification ultimately serves to silence some voices and amplify others.
Martin employs a combination of methodologies from ethnomusicology, Black Studies, geography, and digital humanities to make audible the ways in which gentrification disrupts and disturbs community. Throughout, she centers Black feminist listening practices, thinking through digital modes of listening and imagining emancipatory soundscapes. Intersectional Listening benefits from an innovative combination of sources, from interviews and soundwalks to passive acoustic recording and machine learning. Martin shares compelling stories of music and sound in the nation's capital, and in doing so shifts conversations about how we listen to Black life. By foregrounding how processes of gentrification systematically seek to devalue, mishear, and ultimately silence Black possibility, Intersectional Listening posits how we can challenge ourselves to refute the consistent mishearing of Black people in Washington, DC and beyond.
Table of Contents:
Introduction: Listening Intersectionally to the Chocolate City
"I'm On My Way to Atlanta"
Interlude: Notes on Soundwalking as Black Feminist Method
Smooth Jazz and Static
7th and Florida
Life, Death, and Legacy in Go-Go Music
Interlude: Sounds of the City
"Plainly Audible"
Coda: Freedom Sounds in the Nation's Capital