The Sounds of North: Political Efficacy and the “Listening Self” in Elizabeth Hay’s Late Nights on Air ...

In a historical moment where sound and aural senses are elided, either as a result of technological advancement or as noise pollution, Elizabeth Hay’s novel Late Nights on Air mounts a defense of sound and listening by foregrounding alternative discourses from the period that derive from the Canadia...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Visvis, Vikki
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Canadian Literature 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/cl.v0i225.186540
https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/canlit/article/view/186540
id ftdatacite:10.14288/cl.v0i225.186540
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.14288/cl.v0i225.186540 2023-08-27T04:07:54+02:00 The Sounds of North: Political Efficacy and the “Listening Self” in Elizabeth Hay’s Late Nights on Air ... Visvis, Vikki 2016 https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/cl.v0i225.186540 https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/canlit/article/view/186540 en eng Canadian Literature https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/cl.v0i225 Text article-journal Article ScholarlyArticle 2016 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.14288/cl.v0i225.18654010.14288/cl.v0i225 2023-08-07T14:24:23Z In a historical moment where sound and aural senses are elided, either as a result of technological advancement or as noise pollution, Elizabeth Hay’s novel Late Nights on Air mounts a defense of sound and listening by foregrounding alternative discourses from the period that derive from the Canadian North. Specifically, by alluding to Glenn Gould’s method of contrapuntal listening and the explorer John Hornby, whom John Moss in 1971 aligned with the “greatest Arctic narrative [of] silence” (56), the novel configures sound and listening as efficacious, both in terms of political engagement and identity formation. Ultimately, in Late Nights on Air sound and, by extension, aural sensory engagement within a specifically Canadian northern tradition disallows a reductive understanding of Canada’s sonic environment in the late twentieth century as technologically obsolete or as ecologically threatening by revealing its value as a political and identity-forming tool. ... : Canadian Literature, No 225 (2015): Radio, Film, and Fiction ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
description In a historical moment where sound and aural senses are elided, either as a result of technological advancement or as noise pollution, Elizabeth Hay’s novel Late Nights on Air mounts a defense of sound and listening by foregrounding alternative discourses from the period that derive from the Canadian North. Specifically, by alluding to Glenn Gould’s method of contrapuntal listening and the explorer John Hornby, whom John Moss in 1971 aligned with the “greatest Arctic narrative [of] silence” (56), the novel configures sound and listening as efficacious, both in terms of political engagement and identity formation. Ultimately, in Late Nights on Air sound and, by extension, aural sensory engagement within a specifically Canadian northern tradition disallows a reductive understanding of Canada’s sonic environment in the late twentieth century as technologically obsolete or as ecologically threatening by revealing its value as a political and identity-forming tool. ... : Canadian Literature, No 225 (2015): Radio, Film, and Fiction ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Visvis, Vikki
spellingShingle Visvis, Vikki
The Sounds of North: Political Efficacy and the “Listening Self” in Elizabeth Hay’s Late Nights on Air ...
author_facet Visvis, Vikki
author_sort Visvis, Vikki
title The Sounds of North: Political Efficacy and the “Listening Self” in Elizabeth Hay’s Late Nights on Air ...
title_short The Sounds of North: Political Efficacy and the “Listening Self” in Elizabeth Hay’s Late Nights on Air ...
title_full The Sounds of North: Political Efficacy and the “Listening Self” in Elizabeth Hay’s Late Nights on Air ...
title_fullStr The Sounds of North: Political Efficacy and the “Listening Self” in Elizabeth Hay’s Late Nights on Air ...
title_full_unstemmed The Sounds of North: Political Efficacy and the “Listening Self” in Elizabeth Hay’s Late Nights on Air ...
title_sort sounds of north: political efficacy and the “listening self” in elizabeth hay’s late nights on air ...
publisher Canadian Literature
publishDate 2016
url https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/cl.v0i225.186540
https://ojs.library.ubc.ca/index.php/canlit/article/view/186540
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/cl.v0i225
op_doi https://doi.org/10.14288/cl.v0i225.18654010.14288/cl.v0i225
_version_ 1775348617305915392