Soundscapes in the Past: Towards a Phenomenology of Sound at the Landscape Level

Author(s): Kristy Primeau; David Witt

Year: 2016

Summary

During the past few decades, researchers have developed methodologies for understanding how past people have experienced their wider world. The majority of these reconstructions focused upon viewsheds and movement, illustrating how individuals visually observed their environment and navigated through it. However, these reconstructions have tended to ignore another sense which played a major role in how people experienced the wider, physical world: that of sound. While the topic of sound has been discussed within phenomenology at the theoretical level, and has been approached at the site level through the growing study of "acoustic archaeology," it has not seen much practical application at the landscape level. This multimedia presentation illustrates how GIS technology can be utilized to develop soundscapes, exploring how people heard their wider surroundings, as well as saw them.

Cite this Record

Soundscapes in the Past: Towards a Phenomenology of Sound at the Landscape Level. Kristy Primeau, David Witt. Presented at The 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Orlando, Florida. 2016 ( tDAR id: 404581)

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