Article ID: CBB118537584

The Maniac-Making Machine: A Media History of Delayed Auditory Feedback (July 2021)

unapi

Historians have shown how categories of unwanted sound—that is noise—have been subject to projects of technological abatement and domestication. Less has been written on how noise relates to the production of new categories of personhood. This article traces how military, medical, and scholarly speech-hearing researchers developed "delayed auditory feedback" (DAF), a disruptive and initially unwanted echo effect produced via magnetic tape recording, since the late 1940s. It argues that the emotional, spatial, and temporal ambiguities raised by DAF offered key perceptual resources for constructing modern speech-hearing science as a discipline and for reimagining the technologically mediated speaking-hearing human subject. By prying open the interval between vocalization and self-hearing, DAF afforded researchers a new domain of experimentally performable auditory subjectivity, one in which they could more readily distinguish clients from research subjects, auditory malingerers from the "organically" deaf, and cybernetic "closed-loop" from stimulus-response "open-loop" audiological models.

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Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB118537584/

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Authors & Contributors
Taylor, Timothy
Bijsterveld, Karin
Vaillant, Derek
Taylor, Timothy Dean
Rath, Richard Cullen
Peters, J.
Concepts
Sound
Sound studies
Sound Recording Industry
Technology and music
Music
Radio
Time Periods
20th century
20th century, early
19th century
21st century
20th century, late
18th century
Places
United States
Germany
Ukraine
Netherlands
Chicago (Illinois, U.S.)
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