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Browsing by Author "Austin-Stewart J"

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    Discovering new NZ music in the streaming age is getting harder – what’s the future for local artists?
    (The Conversation Media Group Ltd, 2025-05-28) Wilson O; Hoad C; Carter D; Austin-Stewart J
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    Hello! I’ve Been Here the Whole Time: When non-cochlear sound art meets disability aesthetics
    (Cambridge University Press, 2024-12-17) Austin-Stewart J
    Seth Kim Cohen’s notion of non-cochlear sound art explores the idea of more-than-music, reframing sonic listening, shifting away from the aesthetic and towards the conceptual, reducing ‘the value of sonic pleasure in favor of a broader set of philosophical, social, political, and historical concerns’. While this notion holds academic and artistic merit, it does not acknowledge similar explorations in sound art within disabled and d/Deaf communities and developments within disability aesthetics. Works within the disability arts that fit into Kim-Cohen’s non-cochlear sound art were created prior to the publication of his 2009 text In the Blink of an Ear: Toward a Non-Cochlear Sound Art and have continued to develop since. This article discusses Kim-Cohen’s non-cochlear sound and asks the reader to view it alongside discussions of disability aesthetics and sound art works by Hard of Hearing (HoH) and d/Deaf artists. In doing so, it illustrates how disability art and aesthetics are inherently conceptual and sociopolitical and have not only been forgotten in discussion of non-cochlear sound art, but have also carved their own path.

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