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Soundscapes of Trauma: Music, Sound and the Ethics of Witnessing

Project description

Listening to the sonic experience in situations of confinement and displacement

The ERC-funded MUTE project explores sonic violence, acoustic witnessing and the ethics of listening. It investigates the weaponisation of music/sound in situations of confinement and displacement in light of transnational developments in technologies of terror from the cold war to this day. The project also sheds light on how music/sound can become a tool for reclaiming agency, explores the ethical challenges of such research, and of music programmes for prisoners and refugees. MUTE’s comparative approach will extend to Cyprus, Greece, Soviet Union, Russia, and South America, and more. A theoretical, empirical and interdisciplinary study, it brings together (ethno)musicology, social anthropology, history, critical theory, human rights law and sound art.

Objective

MUTE’s main objective is to investigate for the first time empirically and theoretically the use of music and sound in situations of confinement and displacement from the Cold War to contemporary times. It explores their weaponization in light of transnational developments in technologies of terror. At the same time, it carefully attends to how music/sound can become a tool of survival, even in the same setting in which they are weaponized. Also explored are ethical challenges of such research, and of music programmes for prisoners and refugees, highlighting their shortcomings and providing alternative models. MUTE innovates through a theoretical framework that investigates the interlocking of politics, ethics, and aesthetics, focusing on the ethics of sound and ethics of witnessing. Its comparative approach extends to (post)colonial Cyprus, Greece, Serbia, Germany, Soviet Union and contemporary Russia, Iraq, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and Paraguay. MUTE will critically analyse this complex phenomenon across the disciplines of (ethno)musicology, social anthropology, history, critical theory, human rights law and sound art, since it cannot be fully grasped through the methods of any one alone. The PI’s extensive immersion into all disciplinary components over the last decade, evident in her novel approach, ensures the successful implementation of research objectives. MUTE’s findings and results will transform scientific discourse, changing current perceptions about music’s social function. This historical recovery is important in revisiting and assessing detention-related policies and current definitions of torture. Given recent mass asylum seeking in Europe and the growing number of music research projects with refugees, it will offer the needed ethical, methodological and theoretical foundations for present and future research, ensuring the well-being of participants and researchers, research excellence, and critically nuanced scholarship.

Host institution

ETHNIKO IDRYMA EREVNON
Net EU contribution
€ 1 662 495,22
Address
VAS KONSTANTINOU 48
11635 Athina
Greece

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Region
Αττική Aττική Κεντρικός Τομέας Αθηνών
Activity type
Research Organisations
Links
Total cost
€ 1 662 495,22

Beneficiaries (4)