Book Presentation: Audiobooks as Artefacts

You must sign in to view content.

Sign In

Sign In

Sign Up

Moderator
Patricia Alonso, Editorial Manager, Common Ground Research Networks, Spain

Description

Their ever-evolving popularity notwithstanding, audiobooks remain a rather undertheorized phenomenon. The prevailing handful of existing studies seem to have adopted an inherently historicist approach, which fails to identify and scrutinize their aesthetic importance. Thus, rather than regarding them as mere recorded ‘versions’ of existing literary works, this book explores them as the unique products of a hitherto undefined artistic genre. As performance-based aural artefacts, the very act of listening to them is rendered an aesthetic experience in its own right. By effectively embracing an interdisciplinary approach and introducing a set of aesthetic questions and philosophical conundrums (ignited by a paradigmatic application of the New Institutional Theory of Art), this study establishes a new aesthetic category—which, in turn, not only classifies audiobooks as artworks to all intents and purposes, but also generates the criteria and parameters for evaluating their merit. Since the proof of the proverbial pudding is purportedly in the eating, in surveying a series of concrete case studies—each highlighting different degrees of complexities—this study mainly examines first-person narratives as the most natural medium for the aesthetics of the audiobook. As such, the investigation herein provides one with comparative close listenings, appropriately analyzing and debating their aesthetic properties. Finally, in exploring what this study identifies as one’s informed intuition and its role in the craft of casting audiobooks, this study also proposes a new understating of how aesthetic appreciation works in action. 


Born in 1983, Dr. David Sheinberg was awarded his PhD at Goldsmiths, University of London. Having absorbed an extensive interdisciplinary background, he established himself as a philosopher of the arts, as well as a scholar and practitioner of the performing arts. He identifies as an aficionado and connoisseur of audiobooks and aural artefacts.

Digital Media

Digital media is only available to registered participants.