Sounds of History

Two of Cathy Davidson’s recent blog entries at Hastac feature videos onĀ  Tinkering and Sound. They’re both fascinating links, but especially the 2002 interview with Emily Thompson about Sound. Thompson (who won the MacArthur is brilliant) and her work was part of the inspiration for the Teaching American History project I developed, the Sounds of American History. Thompson explores how the transformations in what people heard and how they listened. She argues that people heard a new kind of sound, produced by modernity and that they listened differently, too, as consumers of a commodity. Machines did not just change society; they changed how we sensed and perceived life itself.

Is lunch free? What about journalism & knowledge?

Malcolm Gladwell reviews Free by Chris Anderson: Books: The New Yorker and eviscerates his argument that information should be free. I am not so sure that Gladwell has it right and think that there is certainly a difference between information and journalism or scholarship or knowledge. Yet, his point is a good one and has a greater appreciation for nuance and historical changes. Chris Anderson responds, less well I think, in Techdirt. Both are worth the read.