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Collisions:: of memory, voice, sound, and physicality though a multi-sensorial radio remix installation

Collisions:: of memory, voice, sound, and physicality though a multi-sensorial radio remix installation
Collisions:: of memory, voice, sound, and physicality though a multi-sensorial radio remix installation
The ethnographic installation “Kabusha Radio Remix” repurposes Bemba language recordings from the archived audio recordings from one of Radio Zambia’s most popular programmes, Kabusha Takolelwe Bowa (a Bemba proverb meaning “The Person Who Inquires First, Is Not Poisoned by a Mushroom”). In the programme, host David Yumba answered listeners’ letters about politics, society, family, and current events, as they were read aloud by co-host Emelda Yumbe. Central to the installation is a reengineered 60-minute Kabusha “radio program” that mimics its original format. This version, however, juxtaposes Yumba’s recorded responses as answers to present-day inquiries about politics, the technicalities of archives, current Zambian and global politics.
This audio paper, framed as a conversation, addresses the collision of the tactile and the sonic, and discusses how sonic frontiers are exploited and transgressed in the engineered sound mix and via visitors’ engagements with the installation, inviting visitors to “encounter voices and images from the past in a technological space that is both historical and contemporary” (Stoller 2015).  The paper addresses how the installation works as a digital hypertext to analogue ephemera, and how issues of subject agency, immortality, translation, wisdom, ownership, truth, and the media-democracy relationship are thrown into bold relief.
Phillips, Kwame
31da4afa-6336-4810-8b4f-a46027d28770
Vidali, Debra
9a3bf866-c996-450b-9d46-37c1efcf5e71
Phillips, Kwame
31da4afa-6336-4810-8b4f-a46027d28770
Vidali, Debra
9a3bf866-c996-450b-9d46-37c1efcf5e71

Phillips, Kwame and Vidali, Debra (2017) Collisions:: of memory, voice, sound, and physicality though a multi-sensorial radio remix installation. Seismograf, 2017 (11). (doi:10.48233/SEISMOGRAF1903).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The ethnographic installation “Kabusha Radio Remix” repurposes Bemba language recordings from the archived audio recordings from one of Radio Zambia’s most popular programmes, Kabusha Takolelwe Bowa (a Bemba proverb meaning “The Person Who Inquires First, Is Not Poisoned by a Mushroom”). In the programme, host David Yumba answered listeners’ letters about politics, society, family, and current events, as they were read aloud by co-host Emelda Yumbe. Central to the installation is a reengineered 60-minute Kabusha “radio program” that mimics its original format. This version, however, juxtaposes Yumba’s recorded responses as answers to present-day inquiries about politics, the technicalities of archives, current Zambian and global politics.
This audio paper, framed as a conversation, addresses the collision of the tactile and the sonic, and discusses how sonic frontiers are exploited and transgressed in the engineered sound mix and via visitors’ engagements with the installation, inviting visitors to “encounter voices and images from the past in a technological space that is both historical and contemporary” (Stoller 2015).  The paper addresses how the installation works as a digital hypertext to analogue ephemera, and how issues of subject agency, immortality, translation, wisdom, ownership, truth, and the media-democracy relationship are thrown into bold relief.

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Published date: 15 November 2017

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Local EPrints ID: 474316
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/474316
PURE UUID: e0f43943-c01c-48f6-82e3-a004210a9548

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Date deposited: 17 Feb 2023 17:47
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 00:27

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Author: Kwame Phillips
Author: Debra Vidali

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