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A Resonant Ecology

Duke University Press is releasing Max Ritts’ Resonant Ecology book on October 4 this year, as part of the Sign Storage Transmission series edited by Lisa Gitelman and Jonathan Sterne.

“In A Resonant Ecology, Max Ritts traces how sound’s integration into the environmental politics of Canada’s North Coast has paved the way for massive industrial expansion. While conservationists hope that the dissemination of whale songs and other nature sounds will showcase the beauty of local wildlife for people around the world, Ritts reveals how colonial capitalism can co-opt sonic efforts to protect the coast. He demonstrates how digital technologies allow industry to sonically map new shipping lanes and facilitate new ways of experiencing sound—premised not on listening, but on sound’s exploitable status as a data resource. By outlining how sound can both perpetuate and refuse capitalist colonialism, Ritts challenges the idea that the sonic realm is inherently liberatory and reveals sound to be a powerfully uncertain object. Through a situated geographical approach, he makes the case that only a decolonial and multigenerational environmental politics can counter the false promise of “sustainable marine development” held up by industry and the state.”

Acknowledgments  ix
Introduction: On a Resonant North Coast  1
1. At Cetacea Lab: Whale Song and Conservation’s “Late Style”  23
2. Value in Injury: The Work of Science in Ocean Noise Regulation  43
3. “Port Noise”: Sense of Place and State Space in Dodge Cove  65
4. Ancestral War Hymns: Opacity and Indigeneity in Gyibaaw  87
5. Smartest Coast in the World? Digital Sound and Enclosure  107
Conclusion: A Country that Belongs in No Country  125
Notes  133
Bibliography  161
Index