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21 - Noise: Labour, Industry and Embodiment in Interwar Factory Fiction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 June 2023

Alex Goody
Affiliation:
Oxford Brookes University
Ian Whittington
Affiliation:
University of Mississippi
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Summary

In early twentieth-century Britain, modernity became synonymous with the noise of technology. Increasing attention was paid to the sonic by-products of machines and their effects on the human body. Listening in to this chapter of sound history amplifies an often-silenced mode of response to technology and its impacts, as well as foregrounding multiple and competing discourses about noise and their indexing of cultural, social and political concerns. The designation of sound as noise is, of course, highly subjective: one person’s music is another’s torment. Noise can be both demonised and fetishised, signalling an intrusion into a soundscape understood as restorative or harmonious, or a means of protest and counter-cultural resistance. At once a sign of sociability, of existence (as vibration, everything is in noise), noise can also be unwanted, non-periodic sound, a form of torture or weaponry. Often associated with excess or background sound, noise slips between figure and ground as it carries or disrupts meaning.

While concerns about noise are ubiquitous, the modernist period saw an intensification of attention to noise and its mental and physical effects. Whether or not decibel levels rose, the first decades of the twentieth century were characterised by the proliferation of the sounds of technology. The rise of amplified and broadcast sound reshaped public and private soundscapes as well as modes of listening. Aptly called ‘the age of noise’ by Aldous Huxley, interwar Britain saw the publication of a plethora of books on noise. In one such publication, A. H. Davis describes how the ‘irregular rattle of machinery, the shriek of brakes, the crescendo of violently accelerating motorcycles, the shattering explosions of road-breaking drills, burst rudely upon our consciousness and stir our resentment and fears’ (Davis 1937: 5). Adjectival assault indicates the intrusive experience of shock and disturbance associated with mechanical sound. With the advent in the 1920s of a unit (the decibel) and machines (audiometers) with which to measure sound intensity objectively, noise became something to be charted, analysed and controlled. Background sound became undesirable noise through its continual foregrounding. As Davis notes, these acoustical developments led to ‘an increasing consciousness of noise’ (Davis 1937: 4); they made a sonic phenomenon visible through charts and audiograms.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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