Description

Book Synopsis
This book charts the unsettled media cultures and deep time of shellac, retracing its journey from the visual to the sonic, and back again. Each chapter unveils a situated moment in the long history of shellac – travelling from its early visual culture to Emile Berliner’s discovery of its auditory properties through to its recycling in contemporary art and design practices. Unforeseen correspondences between artefacts as diverse as mirrors, seals, gramophone discs and bombs are revealed. With its combinatory approach and commitment to material thinking, Shellac in Visual and Sonic Culture insists on moments of contact, encounter, and transformation. The book notably addresses the colonial unconscious underpinning the early transnational recording industry, highlighting the multiple gestures and forms of labour entombed within the production of the 78rpm disc. Roy explores shellac as a concrete substance, as well as the malleable stuff of which stories, histories and modern imaginings were made – and unmade.

Table of Contents
Introduction: From material culture to the materials of culture
Chapter 1. Sheen: Early stories and circulation of shellac
Chapter 2. Crackle: Assembling the record
Chapter 3. Mirrors: Phono-fetishism and intersensory visions
Chapter 4. Detonations: Shellac at war
Chapter 5. Shards: Waste, obsolescence, and contemporary remediations
Conclusion: Sonic sculptures
Index

Shellac in Visual and Sonic Culture: Unsettled

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    £101.65

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    RRP £107.00 – you save £5.35 (5%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Thu 18 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Elodie A. Roy

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      View other formats and editions of Shellac in Visual and Sonic Culture: Unsettled by Elodie A. Roy

      Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
      Publication Date: 02/10/2023
      ISBN13: 9789463729543, 978-9463729543
      ISBN10: 9463729542

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book charts the unsettled media cultures and deep time of shellac, retracing its journey from the visual to the sonic, and back again. Each chapter unveils a situated moment in the long history of shellac – travelling from its early visual culture to Emile Berliner’s discovery of its auditory properties through to its recycling in contemporary art and design practices. Unforeseen correspondences between artefacts as diverse as mirrors, seals, gramophone discs and bombs are revealed. With its combinatory approach and commitment to material thinking, Shellac in Visual and Sonic Culture insists on moments of contact, encounter, and transformation. The book notably addresses the colonial unconscious underpinning the early transnational recording industry, highlighting the multiple gestures and forms of labour entombed within the production of the 78rpm disc. Roy explores shellac as a concrete substance, as well as the malleable stuff of which stories, histories and modern imaginings were made – and unmade.

      Table of Contents
      Introduction: From material culture to the materials of culture
      Chapter 1. Sheen: Early stories and circulation of shellac
      Chapter 2. Crackle: Assembling the record
      Chapter 3. Mirrors: Phono-fetishism and intersensory visions
      Chapter 4. Detonations: Shellac at war
      Chapter 5. Shards: Waste, obsolescence, and contemporary remediations
      Conclusion: Sonic sculptures
      Index

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