Radiolab’s Sound Strategic Maneuvers

Argumentation 31 (4):663-680 (2017)
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Abstract

How might argumentation scholars approach sound? Using the analytics afforded by strategic maneuvering, this essay identifies three unique features of sonic presentational devices: they are immersive, immediate and embodied. Although these features offer arguers presentational resource, they also pose new problems to the reasonable resolution of disagreement: immersion hazards overlap, immediacy risks rate of delivery beyond reflection, and materiality can coerce listeners. To theorize strategic use of sound, I reconstruct and analyze a popular Radiolab segment “The Unconscious Toscanini of the Brain.” I find Radiolab uses three different sonic figures: synchronicity, or the translation of data into sound to foreground temporal relations; musical stings, an auditory invocation of embodied memory and the wave, a sonic strategy to arouse and narrow attention. I conclude that Radiolab’s use of sound is reasonable because it extends the critical discussion.

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Citations of this work

Designing Soundscapes for Argumentation.Justin Eckstein - 2018 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 51 (3):269-292.
Belarus’s Sound Body.Justin Eckstein - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (5):141.
Response to Groarke : Figuring Sound.Justin Eckstein - 2018 - Informal Logic 38 (3):341-345.

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The soundscape: our sonic environment and the tuning of the world.R. Murray Schafer - 1977 - [United States]: Distributed to the book trade in the United States by American International Distribution.

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