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  • Rosalind E. Krauss

    Under Blue Cup

  • Andres Lepik (Hg.)

    Moderators of Change. Architektur, die hilft

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    Architecture and Violence

  • Roger Thiel

    Anarchitektur

  • Charles Jencks

    The Story of Post-Modernism

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    Creatives in Japan. Keywords to Know

  • Paul Hegarty, Martin Halliwell

    Beyond and Before. Progressive Rock since the 1960s

  • Susanne Neubauer

    Paul Thek Reproduced, 1969 - 1977

  • Yvonne Rainer

    Poems

  • Alan Pipes

    How to Design Websites

  • Nick Land

    Fanged Noumena. Collected Writings 1987-2007

  • Raúl Zibechi

    Territorien des Widerstands. Eine politische Kartografie…

  • Paul De Bruyne, Pascal Gielen

    Community Art: The Politics of Trespassing

  • Rem Koolhaas, Hans Ulrich Obrist (Hg.)

    Project Japan. An Oral History of Metabolism

  • Florian Urban

    Tower and Slab. Histories of Global Mass Housing

  • Roman Ondák

    Loop

  • Marit Paasche, Judy Radul (Hg.)

    A Thousand Eyes. Media Technology, Law, and Aesthetics

  • Wolfgang Sonne (Hg.)

    Die Medien der Architektur

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    Poster Collection 23. In Series

  • Barry Kernfeld

    Pop Song Piracy. Disobedient Music Distribution Since 1929

  • Andrea Cornwall (Hg.)

    The Participation Reader

  • Franco "Bifo" Berardi

    After the Future

  • 51N4E

    Double or Nothing

  • Molly Jane Quinn, Jenna Talbott

    It's Lonely in the Modern World

  • Thomas Meinecke

    Lookalikes

  • Moritz Baßler, Robin Curtis, et al. (Hg…

    Kultur und Kritik (Heft 1, Herbst 2012) POP

  • M. Berner, A. Hoffmann, B. Lange

    Sensible Sammlungen. Aus dem anthropologischen Depot

  • Simon Rothöhler

    Amateur der Weltgeschichte. Historiographische Praktiken im…

  • Gregor Eichinger, Eberhard Tröger

    Touch Me! Das Geheimnis der Oberfläche

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    Visual Storytelling. Inspiring a New Visual Language

  • Christian Marazzi

    Capital and Affects. The Politics of the Language Economy

  • Shannon Jackson

    Social Works. Performing Art, Supporting Publics

  • Hal Foster

    The Art-Architecture Complex

  • Thomas Hirschhorn

    Establishing a Critical Corpus

  • Andrej Holm, Klaus Lederer, Matthias…

    Linke Metropolenpolitik. Erfahrungen und Perspektiven am…

  • Lars Spuybroek

    The Sympathy of Things

  • Jarett Kobek

    Atta (Semiotext(e) / Intervention)

  • Stan VanDerBeek

    The Culture Intercom

  • A. Moravánszky, J. Hopfengärtner (Hg.)

    Aldo Rossi und die Schweiz. Architektonische…

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    Urban Prayers – Neue religiöse Bewegungen in der globalen…

  • Marta Herford, Markus Richter (Hg.)

    Wir sind alle Astronauten. Richard Buckminster Fuller

  • Jürgen Teller

    Touch Me

  • Huber, Meltzer, Munder, von Oppeln (Hg.)

    Kunst und Design im erweiterten Feld. It's Not a…

  • Lukas Feireiss,Ole Bouman

    Testify! The Consequences of Architecture

  • Marie J. Aquilino

    Beyond Shelter. Architecture for Crisis

  • El Croquis 156

    Valerio Olgiati 1996-2011

  • Pier Vittorio Aureli

    The Possibility of an Absolute Architecture

  • Anne Mikoleit, Moritz Pürckhauer

    Urban Code. 100 Lessons for Understanding the City

  • Mieke Gerritzen, Geert Lovink, Minke…

    I Read Where I Am. Exploring New Information Cultures

  • Matt Mullican

    Notating the Cosmology 1973-2008

  • A. Fernández Per, J. Mozas, J. Arpa

    This is Hybrid. An analysis of mixed-use buildings by a+t

  • Arno Brandlhuber, Silvan Linden (Hg.)

    Disko 20-25 Architektur ohne Architektur

  • Craig Buckley, Jean-Louis Violeau (Hg.)

    Utopie. Texts and Projects, 1967–1978

  • Anne König, Paul Feigelfeld (Hg.)

    LIGNA. An Alle! Radio Theater Stadt

  • Jürgen Krusche, Günther Vogt

    Strassenräume in Berlin, Shanghai, Tokyo, Zürich. Eine foto…

  • Wim Crouwel

    A Graphic Odyssey - Catalogue

  • David Ake

    Source. Music of the Avant-garde, 1966 - 1973

  • Murray Grigor

    Infinite Space. Der Architekt John Launter. DVD

  • Yona Friedman

    Architecture with the People, by the People

  • Erik Swyngedouw

    Civic City Cahier 5. Designing the Post-Political City and…

  • Lars Lerup

    One Million Acres & No Zoning

  • Toyo Ito

    Tarzans in the Media Forest

  • M, Kelley, J. Shaw, Niagara, C, Loren

    Destroy All Monsters Magazine 1976-1979

  • Ntone Edjabe, Edgar Pieterse (Hg.)

    African Cities Reader II. Mobilities & Fixtures

  • M. Hlavajova, S. Sheikh, J. Winder (Hg.)

    On Horizons. A Critical Reader in Contemporary Art

  • Michael Sorkin

    All Over the Map. Writing on Buildings and Cities

  • Nadine Barth (Hg.)

    German Fashion Design 1946-2012

  • Simon Reynolds

    Retromania. Pop Culture's Addiction to its Own Past

  • Stan Allen, Marc McQuade (Hg.)

    Landform Building

  • Fredric Jameson

    Representing Capital. A Reading of Volume One

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    Modell Autodidakt

  • e-flux journal

    Are You Working Too Much? Post-Fordism, Precarity, and the…

  • PIE Books (Hg.)

    Paper & Cloth. Ready-to-Use Background Patterns(+DVD)

  • McKenzie Wark

    The Beach Beneath the Street. The Everyday Life and…

  • Pedro Barateiro, Ricardo Valentim (Hg.)

    Activity (is to a group what content is to platform)

  • El Croquis 155

    Sanaa 2008-2011

  • Laurie Anderson, Trisha Brown, Gordon…

    Pioneers of the Downtown Scene

  • Curtis, Rees, White, Ball (Hg.)

    Expanded Cinema. Art, Performance, Film

  • Kaminer, Robles-Dúran, Sohn (Hg.)

    Urban Asymmetries

  • Nico Stehr, Reiner Grundmann

    Die Macht der Erkenntnis

  • Hans Ulrich Obrist

    Ai Weiwei Speaks

  • Abel, Evers, Klaasen, Troxler (Hg.)

    Open Design Now. (why design cannot remain exclusive)

  • AA Bronson, Peter Hobbs

    Queer Spirits

  • Momus

    Solution 214-238. The Book of Japans

  • A. Avanessian, L. Skrebowski (Hg.)

    Contemporary Art and Aesthetics

  • 2G N. 57

    Njiric+ Architekti

  • Lucia Nagib

    World Cinema and the Ethics of Realism

  • Huda Smitshuijzen, Abi Fares (Hg.)

    Typographic Matchmaking in the City

  • H. F. Mallgrave, D. Goodman

    An Introduction to Architectural Theory. 1968 to the Present

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    G: An Avant-Garde Journal of Art, Architecture, Design and…

  • Alexander Bolton

    Alexander McQueen. Savage Beauty

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    Hommage à Berlin. Photographien

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    Book Worm

  • Claire Doherty, Paul O'Neill (Hg.)

    Locating the Producers. Durational Approaches to Public Art

  • Professur Theorie und Geschichte der…

    Architecture in the Age of Empire / Architektur der neuen…

  • Garth A. Myers

    African Cities. Alternative Visions of Urban Theory and…

  • Jean-Louis Cohen

    Architecture in Uniform. Designing and Building for the 2nd…

  • Christopher Dell

    Replaycity. Improvisation als urbane Praxis

Making Noise. From Babel to the Big Bang and Beyond

When did the “silent deeps” become cacophonous and galaxies begin to swim in a sea of cosmic noise? Why do we think that noises have colors and that colors can be loud? How loud is too loud, and says who? Attending to sounds at once physical and political, Hillel Schwartz listens across millennia for a trajectory of changes in the Western experience and understanding of noise. From the uproarious junior gods of Babylonian epic to crying infants heard over baby monitors, from doubly-mythic Echo to loudspeaker feedback, Making Noise follows “unwanted sound” on its path through terrains domestic and industrial, legal and religious, musical and medical, poetic and scientific. At every stage of this tour de force, crafted in the inimitable prose of one of America’s most innovative cultural historians, Schwartz widens and deepens our sense of the reverberations of soundful lives, urban, suburban, rural, or lost. Never so much a question of the intensity of sounds as of the intensity of relationships, the continual redefinition of noise is a sensitive register of contending generations, classes, and genders. Drawing upon the archives of children’s authors and anti-noise activists, catalogs of fireworks and dental drills, letters of worried parents and marine biologists, Making Noise traces the process by which noise has become as potently metaphorical as the original Babel. In astrophysics as in fiction, in economics as in art, noise is no longer bound to acoustic experience. Following the visuals of his Culture of the Copy, Hillel Schwartz has spent two decades listening in to that which, literally and figuratively, makes a perfect copy impossible — those booms, hisses, and rasps that are at once the burden and token of our shared humanity. Unprecedented in its scope, this book will transform sound studies and contemporary assessments of cacophonies loud or uncomfortably quiet.
“Never has so much clarity accompanied so much noise. Hillel Schwartz, a scholar’s scholar channeled by a sagacious and gracious poet, has taken noise from boing to being, from abstractions imposed upon the seemingly insignificant, chaotic, and unruly to a dynamic centrality of actual lives lived and imagined, of physical and political forces. To the extent that noise is audible, Making Noise is the greatest achievement yet produced in the scholarship on sound and listening. To the extent that noise is so much more, Schwartz is the Humboldt of a disorderly Cosmos.”
— Douglas Kahn, author of Noise, Water, Meat: A History of Sound in the Arts
“The society that wishes to move the fastest — not necessarily the most expeditiously — must assimilate enormous quantities of information and sort it out at lightning speed. Along with useful information comes disinformation — human, mechanical, and random error. The brain sorts through this data constantly at large cost. A state of tensile strength at extreme pressure requires only one small cut in the wire to boomerang. Philosopher, cyclist, and innovator in the case management of the acutely ill, Hillel Schwartz has spent twenty years researching the exponentiating phenomenon of ‘noise.’ With unparalleled research, he explores every parameter of this term and its effect upon psyche and physiology. Noise blasts a human being into infinity and he lands in an iron chair without a nametag, an overwounded fleshmachine melted down into an unrecognizable form.”
— Diamanda Galás, composer, vocalist, and performance artist
“We might easily imagine that noise doesn’t have a history, that it’s just, well, sound. But Making Noise reveals that a shifting soundtrack to human life has been an inevitable consequence of social change. New social arrangements and new technologies lead, not just to new sounds, but to new ideas about which sounds are normal, necessary, or pleasant, and which are noxious or dangerous. Hillel Schwartz draws upon an extraordinary range of sources to tell the story of noise with great style and wit. Listen up!”
— Joel Best, author of Everyone’s a Winner: Life in Our Congratulatory Culture
“Think of Hillel Schwartz’s tome as The Book of Noise: not just a, but the history of the hum and thrum of the world. It arrives as if from a dream, a materialization of one of Borges’s imaginary and impossible volumes, a book that contains all creation—and all its clattering contradictions besides. Schwartz takes readers past the swerves of science to the ends of art, tracking how noise has become the elemental apparatus of the universe as well as the troubled twin to sense and sentiment. Making Noise resounds and astounds.”
— Stefan Helmreich, author of Alien Ocean: Anthropological Voyages in Microbial Seas


Hillel Schwartz
Making Noise. From Babel to the Big Bang and Beyond
Zone Books, 2011, 978-1-935408-12-3