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UID:d497119f72c84478f370179e9f2314e7
CATEGORIES:Journées d’étude, Séminaire du CREM
CREATED:20260118T143744
SUMMARY:World Amplification International Study Day
LOCATION:MSH Mondes (bât. Weber)\, salle 2 (RDC) - 200 avenue de la République\, Nan
 terre\, \, 92000\, 
DESCRIPTION:\n \nOrganized by Pierre Prouteau (LAMC &amp; EASt/ULB, CREM, CASE)\nDoes t
 he sound of the world tend to become always more amplified? Why does this f
 eeling stays on the mind like an earworm, sometimes with delight, often wit
 h a negative value attached to it – the nuisance of noise. How has this pot
 entially universal tendency to enhance amplification been reinvigorated by 
 electroacoustic? The objective of this study day is to address electroacous
 tic amplification in its physiological, acoustic, aesthetic, philosophical,
  technical, moral dimensions—is the pleasure of some, the noise of others, 
 and how is the occupied “volume” negotiated? And its afferent political dim
 ension. The idea is to examine the definitions of sound intensity, its effe
 cts on audience perception, and how electroacoustic amplification has impac
 ted already-existing repertoires, and contributed to create new ones. Can s
 ound systems be a weapon in the media arena? As a weapon of the weak or an 
 instrument of domination?\nProgram9h30-10h Coffee\nI. Musicians and amplifi
 cation10h-10h30 Abderraouf Ouertani (member CUNTIC, Univ. of Tunis) What am
 plification requires: The Impact of Amplification on Oud Practices (and its
  study)\n10h30-11h Sarah Benhaim (Lecturer Univ. of Lorraine) Extreme liste
 ning: sounds and amplification in noise music\n11h-11h30 Coffee\nII. Theori
 es and measures of amplification (1)11h30-12h Mukul Menon (predoc, Univ. Tü
 bingen) Modulating Religiosity: Qualified Amplification of Sounds, Ideas, a
 nd Practices \n12h-12h30 Helma Korzybska (S2HEP, Univ. Lyon 1, member LESC/
 CNRS, Univ. Paris Nanterre) Redefining “noise”. Amplifications, modulations
  and redefinitions of auditory perception through cochlear implants\n12h30-
 14h Lunch Break\nII. Theories and measures of amplification (2)14h-14h30 Ca
 rola Lorea (Professor Univ. of Tübingen) On mantras, picnic parties and car
  horns: towards a South Asian sonic theory of amplification as auspiciousne
 ss\n \nConclusive remarks\n14h30-15h Pierre Prouteau (LAMC, EASt/ULB, CREM,
  CASE) What is an "amplified society" ?\n15h-16h Collective discussion and 
 end of study day\n \nAbstractsAbderraouf Ouertani (member CUNTIC, Univ. of 
 Tunis) What amplification requires: The impact of amplification on oud prac
 tices (and its study)\nThis presentation will describe the impact of the wi
 despread use of electric amplification in the case of the oud, between cons
 traints (sound degradation, feedback) and advantages (new sounds, going bey
 ond the strict framework of chamber music). It will also be an opportunity 
 to discuss the place of socio-technical phenomena related to electric ampli
 fication in music studies and to problematise some key concepts in ethnomus
 icology such as ‘instrument’, “music” and ‘musician’.\nSarah Benhaim (Lectu
 rer Univ. of Lorraine) Extreme listening: sounds and amplification in noise
  music\nConsidering loud sound objects in the field of music invites us to 
 take an interest in the technical means and technologies used to amplify mu
 sical productions, but also in musical genres that place particular importa
 nce on sound volume in their creative process and listening modalities. Thi
 s is the case with noise music, an experimental music that emerged in the e
 arly 1980s, which is unique in that it is characterised by noise-based mate
 rial and sound diffusion conditions that are often considered extreme. I wi
 ll examine how noise artists and listeners perceive noise and high-volume a
 mplification aesthetically and sensorially, based on interviews and recordi
 ngs from a field study conducted in Paris. After a brief review of the cent
 rality of noise in noise music, I will explain how amplification constitute
 s a noisy mediation from the point of view of instrumental performance, bef
 ore showing how it plays a major role in live listening by promoting an imm
 ersive and ecstatic listening experience.\nMukul Menon (predoc, Univ. Tübin
 gen) Modulating Religiosity: Qualified Amplification of Sounds, Ideas, and 
 Practices\nSound in the context of public, communal, and private piety is l
 inked to mediation with the more-than-human and the inscription of identity
 , social relations, and associations with the past. Amplification as a tool
  and a method of augmenting such processes is especially evident in religio
 us cultures that are based on what has been termed ‘acoustic piety’, that i
 s, religiosity significantly produced, interpreted, and perceived through s
 ound and in sonic terms. What do differences in sonic and cultural amplific
 ation of religious practices in a hierarchical and stratified social enviro
 nment indicate about underlying social phenomena? To explore this idea, thi
 s paper takes as a case study the popular practice of recitations of the 16
 th-century text, Addhyātma Rāmāyaṇam Kiḷippāṭṭ, a regional vernacular retel
 ling of the religious epic Rāmāyaṇa in Kerala, South India. Using ethnograp
 hic and archival data, it looks at how, through the amplification of recita
 tional practices and ancillary activities- including onsite live and playba
 ck performances, congregational sonic acts, public sermons, and political s
 peeches in urban and rural contexts- particular communities, socialities, a
 nd spaces are delineated. Modulations in how ideas and sounds are expanded 
 indicate particularities of cultural transformations and continuities. whic
 h are expressed, shared, and felt, but also creatively deployed by social a
 gents.\nHelma Korzybska (S2HEP, Univ. Lyon 1, member LESC/CNRS, Univ. Paris
  Nanterre) Redefining “noise”. Amplifications, modulations and redefinition
 s of auditory perception through cochlear implants\nIntroducing neurotechno
 logies into the bodies and perception of people who have lost the ability t
 o hear raises numerous technical, cultural and ethical questions (Mills 201
 2, Friedner and Helmreich 2012, Lloyd &amp; Bonventre 2020, Bonventre et al
 . 2023, Kecman et al. 2026), nuancing widespread notions of human augmentat
 ion. The learning and rehabilitation process following the surgical implant
 ation is long and strenuous, leaving people with sounding worlds they often
  find difficult to interpret and to incorporate. Not only do individuals ha
 ve to deal with day-to-day technical issues and sensory fluctuations, but t
 hey also must learn to manage the cultural gap with the newfound perception
 .\nUsing cochlear implants requires different types of adjustments and nego
 tiations, of sensory thresholds, somatic modes of attention, as well as exp
 ectations… If “augmenting” perception doesn’t usually translate in a melior
 ative sense, some kind of enhancement does operate here. What kinds of ampl
 ifications or intensifications are produced or enabled through these stimul
 ation devices? How are perception and experience amplified in this context?
 \nThe technological design and implantation and rehabilitation protocols le
 ad to very specific ways of heightening sensations and modes of attention. 
 This communication proposes to offer insights into the complexity of equipp
 ing perception with technological devices, by focusing on the semantic, sen
 sory, and affective redefinitions of “noise”, as revealed through the elect
 rode calibration process and negotiations between patients and speech thera
 pists/audiologists observed in a cochlear implantation service in France.\n
 Dr. Carola Lorea (Professor Univ. of Tübingen) On mantras, picnic parties a
 nd car horns: towards a South Asian sonic theory of amplification as auspic
 iousness\nBased on extensive ethnographic research on mantras and sacred so
 und practices in India, this paper develops a preliminary theory of amplifi
 cation as auspiciousness. Drawing on sonic ethnography, I approach amplific
 ation not primarily as a technical operation, but as a culturally and ritua
 lly charged modality of sharing auspiciousness in space. I first demonstrat
 e how amplified sound is widely associated with safety, joy, the assertion 
 of presence, life energy, and positive force. Through everyday and festive 
 soundscapes—such as picnic-season loudspeaker cultures and the affective se
 nsorium of vehicular honking—I show how loudness and sonic expansion are so
 cially experienced as protective, enlivening, and affirming.\nThe paper the
 n moves beyond strictly audible sound to explore forms of non-electroacoust
 ic amplification of unheard auspicious sounds. Focusing in particular on sp
 inning and other kinetic practices, I examine how motion itself amplifies m
 antras—understood as sacred, efficacious formulas—by engaging agentive elem
 ents such as wind, fire, electricity, and the human voice. Here, amplificat
 ion is not only a matter of volume, but of circulation, repetition, and sca
 ttering into space, underscoring the inseparability of sound, movement, spa
 ce, and felt vibration. By bringing together loudness, motion, and mantra p
 ractice, this paper traces the contours of a broader South Asian sonic ideo
 logy in which amplification emerges as a central mode of producing auspicio
 usness and of making place.\n
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p><img src="https://lesc.agerix.org/images/pprouteau/547285538_24374747385
 479844_8854836864622438816_n.jpg" alt="547285538_24374747385479844_88548368
 64622438816_n.jpg" style="margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; float: l
 eft;" width="2048" height="1152" /></p><p>&nbsp;</p><p><strong>Organized by
  Pierre Prouteau (LAMC &amp; EASt/ULB, CREM, CASE)</strong></p><p><span lan
 g="en-US">Does the sound of the world tend to become always more amplified?
  Why does this feeling stays on the mind like an earworm, sometimes with de
 light, often with a negative value attached to it – the nuisance of noise. 
 How has this potentially universal tendency to enhance amplification been r
 einvigorated by electroacoustic? The objective of this study day is to addr
 ess electroacoustic amplification in its physiological, acoustic, aesthetic
 , philosophical, technical, moral dimensions—is the pleasure of some, the n
 oise of others, and how is the occupied “volume” negotiated? And its affere
 nt political dimension. The idea is to examine the definitions of sound int
 ensity, its effects on audience perception, and how electroacoustic amplifi
 cation has impacted already-existing repertoires, and contributed to create
  new ones. Can sound systems be a weapon in the media arena? As a weapon of
  the weak or an instrument of domination?</span></p><h2>Program</h2><p>9h30
 -10h Coffee</p><h3>I. Musicians and amplification</h3><p>10h-10h30 Abderrao
 uf Ouertani (<span lang="en-US"><span>member CUNTIC, Univ. of Tunis)</span>
 </span> What amplification requires: The Impact of Amplification on Oud Pra
 ctices (and its study)</p><p>10h30-11h Sarah Benhaim (Lecturer Univ. of Lor
 raine) Extreme listening: sounds and amplification in noise music</p><p>11h
 -11h30 Coffee</p><h3>II.&nbsp;Theories and measures of amplification (1)</h
 3><p>11h30-12h&nbsp;Mukul Menon (predoc, Univ. Tübingen) Modulating Religio
 sity: Qualified Amplification of Sounds, Ideas, and Practices&nbsp;</p><p><
 span style="background-color: inherit; color: inherit; font-family: inherit
 ; font-size: 1rem; caret-color: auto;">12h-12h30&nbsp;Helma Korzybska (S2HE
 P, Univ. Lyon 1, member LESC/CNRS, Univ. Paris Nanterre) Redefining “noise”
 . Amplifications, modulations and redefinitions of auditory perception thro
 ugh cochlear implants</span></p><p>12h30-14h Lunch Break</p><h3>II. Theorie
 s and measures of amplification (2)</h3><p>14h-14h30&nbsp;Carola Lorea (Pro
 fessor Univ. of Tübingen) On mantras, picnic parties and car horns: towards
  a South Asian sonic theory of amplification as auspiciousness</p><p>&nbsp;
 </p><p><strong>Conclusive remarks</strong></p><p><span lang="en-US">14h30-1
 5h Pierre Prouteau (LAMC, EASt/ULB, CREM, CASE) What is an "amplified socie
 ty" ?</span></p><p>15h-16h Collective discussion and end of study day</p><p
 >&nbsp;</p><h2>Abstracts</h2><p><strong>Abderraouf Ouertani (<span lang="en
 -US">member CUNTIC, Univ. of Tunis)</span> What amplification requires: The
  impact of amplification on oud practices (and its study)</strong></p><p>Th
 is presentation will describe the impact of the widespread use of electric 
 amplification in the case of the oud, between constraints (sound degradatio
 n, feedback) and advantages (new sounds, going beyond the strict framework 
 of chamber music). It will also be an opportunity to discuss the place of s
 ocio-technical phenomena related to electric amplification in music studies
  and to problematise some key concepts in ethnomusicology such as ‘instrume
 nt’, “music” and ‘musician’.</p><p><strong>Sarah Benhaim (Lecturer Univ. of
  Lorraine) Extreme listening: sounds and amplification in noise music</stro
 ng></p><p>Considering loud sound objects in the field of music invites us t
 o take an interest in the technical means and technologies used to amplify 
 musical productions, but also in musical genres that place particular impor
 tance on sound volume in their creative process and listening modalities. T
 his is the case with noise music, an experimental music that emerged in the
  early 1980s, which is unique in that it is characterised by noise-based ma
 terial and sound diffusion conditions that are often considered extreme. I 
 will examine how noise artists and listeners perceive noise and high-volume
  amplification aesthetically and sensorially, based on interviews and recor
 dings from a field study conducted in Paris. After a brief review of the ce
 ntrality of noise in noise music, I will explain how amplification constitu
 tes a noisy mediation from the point of view of instrumental performance, b
 efore showing how it plays a major role in live listening by promoting an i
 mmersive and ecstatic listening experience.</p><p><strong>Mukul Menon (pred
 oc, Univ. Tübingen) Modulating Religiosity: Qualified Amplification of Soun
 ds, Ideas, and Practices</strong></p><p>Sound in the context of public, com
 munal, and private piety is linked to mediation with the more-than-human an
 d the inscription of identity, social relations, and associations with the 
 past. Amplification as a tool and a method of augmenting such processes is 
 especially evident in religious cultures that are based on what has been te
 rmed ‘acoustic piety’, that is, religiosity significantly produced, interpr
 eted, and perceived through sound and in sonic terms. What do differences i
 n sonic and cultural amplification of religious practices in a hierarchical
  and stratified social environment indicate about underlying social phenome
 na? To explore this idea, this paper takes as a case study the popular prac
 tice of recitations of the 16th-century text, <em>Addhyātma</em> <em>Rāmāya
 ṇam</em> <em>Kiḷippāṭṭ,</em> a regional vernacular retelling of the religio
 us epic <em>Rāmāyaṇa </em>in Kerala, South India. Using ethnographic and ar
 chival data, it looks at how, through the amplification of recitational pra
 ctices and ancillary activities- including onsite live and playback perform
 ances, congregational sonic acts, public sermons, and political speeches in
  urban and rural contexts- particular communities, socialities, and spaces 
 are delineated. Modulations in how ideas and sounds are expanded indicate p
 articularities of cultural transformations and continuities. which are expr
 essed, shared, and felt, but also creatively deployed by social agents.</p>
 <p><strong>Helma Korzybska (S2HEP, Univ. Lyon 1, member LESC/CNRS, Univ. Pa
 ris Nanterre) Redefining “noise”. Amplifications, modulations and redefinit
 ions of auditory perception through cochlear implants</strong></p><p>Introd
 ucing neurotechnologies into the bodies and perception of people who have l
 ost the ability to hear raises numerous technical, cultural and ethical que
 stions (Mills 2012, Friedner and Helmreich 2012, Lloyd &amp; Bonventre 2020
 , Bonventre et al. 2023, Kecman et al. 2026), nuancing widespread notions o
 f human augmentation. The learning and rehabilitation process following the
  surgical implantation is long and strenuous, leaving people with sounding 
 worlds they often find difficult to interpret and to incorporate. Not only 
 do individuals have to deal with day-to-day technical issues and sensory fl
 uctuations, but they also must learn to manage the cultural gap with the ne
 wfound perception.</p><p>Using cochlear implants requires different types o
 f adjustments and negotiations, of sensory thresholds, somatic modes of att
 ention, as well as expectations… If “augmenting” perception doesn’t usually
  translate in a meliorative sense, some kind of enhancement does operate he
 re. What kinds of amplifications or intensifications are produced or enable
 d through these stimulation devices? How are perception and experience ampl
 ified in this context?</p><p>The technological design and implantation and 
 rehabilitation protocols lead to very specific ways of heightening sensatio
 ns and modes of attention. This communication proposes to offer insights in
 to the complexity of equipping perception with technological devices, by fo
 cusing on the semantic, sensory, and affective redefinitions of “noise”, as
  revealed through the electrode calibration process and negotiations betwee
 n patients and speech therapists/audiologists observed in a cochlear implan
 tation service in France.</p><p><strong><span lang="en-US">Dr. Carola Lorea
  (Professor Univ. of Tübingen) On mantras, picnic parties and car horns: to
 wards a South Asian sonic theory of amplification as auspiciousness</span><
 /strong></p><p><span lang="en-US">Based on extensive ethnographic research 
 on mantras and sacred sound practices in India, this paper develops a preli
 minary theory of amplification as auspiciousness. Drawing on sonic ethnogra
 phy, I approach amplification not primarily as a technical operation, but a
 s a culturally and ritually charged modality of sharing auspiciousness in s
 pace. I first demonstrate how amplified sound is widely associated with saf
 ety, joy, the assertion of presence, life energy, and positive force. Throu
 gh everyday and festive soundscapes—such as picnic-season loudspeaker cultu
 res and the affective sensorium of vehicular honking—I show how loudness an
 d sonic expansion are socially experienced as protective, enlivening, and a
 ffirming.</span></p><p><span lang="en-US">The paper then moves beyond stric
 tly audible sound to explore forms of non-electroacoustic amplification of 
 unheard auspicious sounds. Focusing in particular on spinning and other kin
 etic practices, I examine how motion itself amplifies mantras—understood as
  sacred, efficacious formulas—by engaging agentive elements such as wind, f
 ire, electricity, and the human voice. Here, amplification is not only a ma
 tter of volume, but of circulation, repetition, and scattering into space, 
 underscoring the inseparability of sound, movement, space, and felt vibrati
 on. By bringing together loudness, motion, and mantra practice, this paper 
 traces the contours of a broader South Asian sonic ideology in which amplif
 ication emerges as a central mode of producing auspiciousness and of making
  place.</span></p>
DTSTAMP:20260629T130354
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260424T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20260424T180000
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