What is it about?

Guy Debord defines the term psychogeography as ‘the study of the precise laws and specific effects of the geographical environment, consciously organised or not,on the emotions and behaviour of individuals’ (Debord 1955: 23). Similar to the belief of psychogeographers that the geography of an environment has a psychological effect on the human mind, proponents of acoustic ecology such as R. Murray Schafer hold that humans are affected by the sound of the environment in which they find themselves. Further to this, they examine the extent to which soundscapes can be shaped by human behaviour.Recently a body of Irish films has emerged that directly engages with the Irish soundscape and landscape on a psychogeographical level. Rather than using landscape as a physical space for the locus of action, these representations of the Irish landscape allow for an engagement with the aesthetic effects of the geographical landscape as a reflection of the psychological states of the protagonists. Bearing this in mind, this article examines how Silence (Collins 2012) arguably demonstrates the most overt and conscious incursion into this area to date. It specifically interrogates how the filmic representation of the psychogeography and soundscape of the Irish rural landscape can serve to express emotion, alienation and nostalgia, thus confronting both the Irish landscape and the weight of its associated history

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Why is it important?

This article employs a uniquely interdisciplinary methodology drawn from social geography and sound studies in order to better consider contemporary Irish cinema.

Perspectives

Imbued with symbolic significance, the Irish landscape has traditionally had a complex relationship with Irish cinema. This article employs a uniquely interdisciplinary methodology drawn from social geography and sound studies in order to better consider the role of landscape within contemporary Irish cinema and the weight of its associated history.

Dr Aimee Mollaghan
Edge Hill University

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This page is a summary of: ‘The Rest is Silence’: Psychogeography, Soundscape and Nostalgia in Pat Collins'Silence, The New Soundtrack, September 2015, Edinburgh University Press,
DOI: 10.3366/sound.2015.0074.
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