FROM TECHNOLOGY STUDIES TO SOUND STUDIES: HOW MATERIALITY MATTERS

Authors

  • Trevor Pinch Cornell University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5840/eps201956354

Keywords:

technology studies, sound studies, standardization, electronic music, social constructivism

Abstract

In this paper I put in dialogue two areas of scholarship: Technology Studies and Sound Studies. Within Technology Studies I discuss the influential social construction of technology approach and illustrate it with the history of the moog electronic music synthesizer, the first commercial music synthesizer. I stress the role of standardization of keyboards and the key role played by users in the development of this technology. I examine certain iconic sounds that the moog synthesizer produces and discuss the stabilization of sound. It is argued that just as technologies can be traced as stabilizing over time, sounds also can be traced with certain sounds stabilizing and being taken up by users whilst other sounds fail to stabilize. The technology required to produce a sound, performance practice, and wider cultural concerns such as the naming of sounds are crucial ingredients in the stabilization of sound.

Published

2020-01-03

How to Cite

[1]
2020. FROM TECHNOLOGY STUDIES TO SOUND STUDIES: HOW MATERIALITY MATTERS. Epistemology & Philosophy of Science. 56, 3 (Jan. 2020), 123–137. DOI:https://doi.org/10.5840/eps201956354.