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Analyzing Primary Sources: Listening to Sounds 277 Views
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Description:
In this video from our courses, learn all about listening to sounds while analyzing your primary source documents.
Transcript
- 00:00
Thank you We sneak analyzing primary sources listening to sounds
- 00:08
Yeah what makes sounds good Primary resource sounds give us
- 00:14
so much information that we can't get from any other
- 00:17
type of primary source The thing i said about you
- 00:20
know you get mundane details from the paintings Like maybe
Full Transcript
- 00:23
someone in the text is going to say like here's
- 00:26
some mundane details you know we might get that But
- 00:29
what sound gives us is stuff like how people sounded
- 00:35
what were their accents like it this time or in
- 00:37
this culture you cannot No matter how much you try
- 00:39
or how much of a linguist you think you are
- 00:41
you cannot describe an accent like you know if i
- 00:44
said to dave like describe you know one of southern
- 00:45
accent sounds like all right you have to say it
- 00:49
exactly in order to describe it And so being able
- 00:51
to hear what people sounded like can tell us a
- 00:53
lot about a lot about them Also again we come
- 00:56
back to the emotional aspect hearing someone actually tell their
- 00:59
own story in their own voice can be really moving
- 01:02
I mean that's Why npr exists Right So sounds really
- 01:06
bring a unique spin to primary source So talk to
- 01:08
us about that kind of the history the technology of
- 01:10
sound I think we have recordings in plastic discs and
- 01:14
some other things that were done around the late eighteen
- 01:17
hundreds Which brings up the important limitation of sounds is
- 01:22
that we don't have sound from before that time right
- 01:26
So all we have is more recent stuff It also
- 01:29
brings up the issue of onley Certain people's voices are
- 01:32
recorded but these days that's different Probably when people are
- 01:35
looking back at us for a thousand years they're gonna
- 01:36
be like oh everyone was on youtube it's so easy
- 01:38
But you know in the in the ladies two hundred
- 01:41
nineteen hundred's not everyone's voices recorded it was only a
- 01:45
few were like on a radio show are something very
- 01:47
specific So we do have a limitation and whose voices
- 01:49
here got it We're the only things that we do
- 01:52
kind of have i guess before then our is shoot
- 01:55
music for piano Well you have cadence and rhythm and
- 01:58
a speed which implies certain technology keyboards you still have
- 02:01
but limiting Yeah i'm glad you brought that up because
- 02:03
that's Kind of a cool like do we count sheet
- 02:06
music as an audio primary source or as a written
- 02:10
primary source and you could do both If you play
- 02:12
that music out you then basically have an audio primary
- 02:16
source but maybe not Because what if that's not exactly
- 02:18
how beethoven it intended but you don't know how quickly
- 02:21
the metrodome went Yeah as the time for that Oh
- 02:30
What makes sound a unique primary resource Can we find
- 02:34
sound sources from all time periods Why not our sound 00:02:38.177 --> [endTime] sources selected How does sheet music complicate the argument
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