鈥,鈥 a podcast collaboration between Cornell media experts and sound artists , begins Feb. 6 with the drop of the first episode, 鈥.鈥
Four more episodes on 鈥淐ontainers,鈥 鈥淏uttons,鈥 鈥淭ypewriters,鈥 and 鈥淎rtificial Intelligence鈥 will be released throughout February. The five-episode series features the voices and research of thirteen Cornell faculty members, more than half from the 麻豆视频 and 麻豆视频, in addition to scholars from the University of Toronto and Indiana University.
鈥淲e are really excited to share this work with you,鈥 said , associate professor of literatures in English (A&S) and chair of the CIVIC Media Studies Initiative.
The fifth season of World According to Sound鈥檚 podcast , 鈥淢edia Objects鈥 amplifies Cornell research in a wide variety of disciplines and highlights Cornell鈥檚
鈥淚t鈥檚 asking listeners to consider that what we typically mean by the concept of media 鈥 newspapers, radio, TV, film 鈥 is much smaller than what media and mediation actually do in our world, and that all of these media 鈥 even 鈥渘ew media鈥 like artificial intelligence, have histories that are crucial to know,鈥 Braddock said. 鈥淭hat has been one of the foundational ideas that鈥檚 driven media studies at Cornell.鈥
Cornell media studies scholars, including , assistant professor of German studies (A&S), , the L. Sanford and Jo Mills Reis Professor of Humanities (A&S), and Braddock, advised the episodes.
The World According to Sound co-creators Chris Hoff 鈥02 and Sam Harnett consider each episode of Media Objects to be a separate 鈥渟onic essay.鈥
鈥淚nstead of an academic paper or a news piece or a podcast, you鈥檙e listening to a sonic representation of an idea,鈥 Harnett said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of a translation. We take the ideas and thoughts in the academic work, and we find the ways in sound to represent them.鈥
Harnett and Hoff make sound works that are unique 鈥 not your typical interview podcast or narrative radio show.
For example, the 鈥淢edia Objects鈥 episode about 鈥淐ontainers,鈥 inspired by an essay by Cornell communications scholar and University of Toronto scholar Jeremy Packer, is an audio collage featuring music and archival audio from 1980s Tupperware parties. It also includes an interview with Duffy, associate professor in the Department of Communication in the College of Agriculture and Life 麻豆视频 and member of the Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies faculty (A&S).
The episodes aim to evoke as well as explain, Hoff said.
鈥淲e might tell you a big idea, but we鈥檙e going to come at that idea five different ways sonically that make you think. It allows you to think about, say, containment in a way that an academic paper just can鈥檛. Audio can do things writing can鈥檛. We鈥檙e trying to tap into that.鈥
During their 2019 residency at Cornell, Braddock introduced the duo to a BBC television program from the 1970s, 鈥淲ays of Seeing.鈥 They said that this experience, combined with their semester of engagement with Cornell scholars from many disciplines, planted the seeds of Ways of Knowing in their minds.
The first Ways of Knowing season, done in partnership with the , introduces different analytical methods and disciplines in the humanities. Further seasons focus on other universities, including a look at science and metaphor at the and a humanistic history of astronomy with
But returning to Cornell is like coming back home for Hoff and Harnett, they said. The Cornell season circles back to the place that inspired the series in the first place.
鈥淭here are moments when these podcasts are quite impressionistic, as if to say, let鈥檚 listen to what Tupperware containers sound like or what would it mean for a typewriter to be a musical instrument,鈥 said Braddock. 鈥淏ut the pieces also have real arguments that are grounded in the kinds of research we do at Cornell, and we think that listening to them will make you want to explore further.鈥