“A Cognitive Listening”: attending to captioning via the critical “unvoiceover”

Angelaki 28 (6):20-49 (2023)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

This paper proposes a theory of text on-screen as “unvoiceover.” It addresses both the case for captioning as social good and the affordances (aesthetic, affective) of writing in or over the moving image. Advancing an argument informed by perspectives from d/deaf Studies, Critical Disability Studies and Digital Interface Studies, and applying modes of analysis from literary criticism alongside those proper to the study of moving image and sound, it examines the idiosyncrasies of text-in-motion as non-sonorous, fugitive counterpart to the traditional, troublesome “voiceover.” To develop a poetics of the unsounding voice on-screen, the paper focalizes its argument through multimedia artist Liza Sylvestre’s Captioned series: a body of moving image work that is itself, paradoxically, uncaptioned. Framing Sylvestre’s lyrical “unvoiceover” as a reimagining of the lost roles of film explainers and literary intertitles, I argue that the artist’s takeover of the caption track intervenes critically in contemporary debates about the ethics of audio-visual translation, situated description and access as public ethos rather than private concern. Posing the artist’s personal-and-political writing as suggestive of a lower-case analogue to Deaf Gain, I show how Sylvestre’s “unvoiceover” educates its “receivers” in the purpose and functioning of captions. By reading Sylvestre’s writing on-screen more closely than its fugitive form seems to invite, I show how the unvoiceover encultures its own demands on its readers and elicits its own habits of reading. By scrutinizing how Sylvestre’s series makes the case for captioning, this paper makes the case for a new appraisal of the aesthetic, affective and political affordances of the unvoiceover as writing on the run.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 91,928

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

The ins and outs of listening as a psychoanalyst.Ken Robinson - 2015 - Empedocles: European Journal for the Philosophy of Communication 6 (2):169-184.
Musement as Listening: Daoist Perspectives on Peirce.Michael L. Raposa - 2012 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 39 (2):207-221.
The Subject (of) Listening.Anthony Gritten - 2014 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 45 (3):203-219.
Toward an aristotelian conception of good listening.Suzanne Rice - 2011 - Educational Theory 61 (2):141-153.

Analytics

Added to PP
2023-11-17

Downloads
20 (#767,800)

6 months
20 (#130,381)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Citations of this work

No citations found.

Add more citations