Fleeting Voices. Preserving Acoustic Heritage in the Archives and the Arts
Speaking, singing and using one’s voice for communication is one of the oldest
cultural techniques. And hearing is one of the earliest human senses, which we actively pursue and exercise already as a foetus.
Since the invention of storing and reproducing voices on sound carriers, the ephemeral level of the acoustic has taken on
a materiality outside the human body.
This has made
it possible to keep the voice for individual and cultural memories. These techniques of saving and remembering are connected
to the desire to hold on to the voice as a coveted object and to preserve it for the future – for the family, the “home”,
for collecting and “scientific purposes”. Simultaneously, they reveal the paradox of the material fixation of the ephemeral.
Every time we replay a sound recording, we are dependent on listening and the fleeting nature of sound as its fundamental
character, which raises the question: What does it mean to capture a voice on a sound carrier? What does this mean culturally,
epistemologically, technically and politically both in terms of tangible and intangible cultural heritage?
Fleeting Voices
discusses voices and their sound carriers as a subject of heritage studies, materials science, media theory, art and cultural
history. It explores the specifics of acoustic heritage, the agency of (various – also human) sound carriers in archives or
artworks and the voice as a medium. It focuses on the voice and the acoustic sphere as an inherently ephemeral and intangible
object of cultural heritage research. At the same time, it addresses recorded voices as highly material objects and still
underestimated subjects of heritage science or art history.