
How does the state separate music from noise? How can such a filtering apparatus shape the content and form of sound production in the city? As a marker of co-presence to the hearing body, sound is always open to (or rather opens up) the politics of shared existence. In the throes of the post-dictatorship period, Brazil's legislative and executive branches implemented a series of sweeping measures to address quality of life concerns, including environmental pollution and urban inequality. In São Paulo, noise control became a recurrent controversy, growing in size and scale between the 1990s and 2010s. Together with the much-debated fear of crime and the socioeconomic and cultural tensions between the rich urban center and the poor peripheries, such ecological agendas against noise as a harmful pollutant have reconfigured the presence of environmental sounds in the city. In this book, Cardoso argues that the framing of specific sounds as unavoidable, unnecessary, or as harmful "noise" has been an effective strategy to organize spaces and administer group behavior in this rapidly expanding city. He focuses on two interrelated processes. First, the series of institutional regulatory mechanisms that turn sounds into the all-embracing "noise" susceptible to state intervention. Second, the constant attempts of interested groups in either attaching or detaching specific sounds (musical events, industrial noise, traffic noise, religious sounds, etc.) from regulatory scrutiny. Sound-politics is the dynamic that emerges from both processes - the channels through which sounds enter (and leave) the sphere of state regulation.
This book investigates how the state utilizes noise control regulations to organize urban space and manage social behavior in post-dictatorship São Paulo. Leonardo Cardoso, an expert in sound studies and musicology, examines the intersection of environmental policy and urban inequality. He argues that the classification of sound as 'noise' serves as a political mechanism to regulate group presence and define the boundaries of acceptable public life in a rapidly expanding metropolis.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of sound studies identify this work as a significant contribution to the understanding of how auditory environments are politicized in urban settings. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous examination of the relationship between state power and the sonic landscape.
Page Count:
266
Publication Date:
2019-06-04
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190660090
ISBN-13:
9780190660093
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