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Sounds Wild and Broken : Sonic Marvels, Evolution's Creativity, and the Crisis of Sensory Extinction
µ¥À̺ñµå Á¶Áö ÇؽºÄà ¤Ó Penguin Publishing Group
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2023³â 03¿ù 07ÀÏ
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448page/135*198*28/317g
  • ISBN
9781984881564/1984881566
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  • ¡°Haskell¡¯s own joy of discovery makes it irresistible to tune in . . . [he] is spot on that sensory connection can inspire people to care in ways that dry statistics never will . . . Haskell¡¯s previous books [...] suggested the emergence of a great poet-scientist. [Sounds Wild and Broken] affirms [him] as a laureate for the earth, his finely tuned scientific observations made more potent by his deep love for the wild he hopes to save.¡± ¡ªNew York Times Book Review ¡°Earth sings and rings and warbles: a musical planet, maybe the only one in the universe. As David George Haskell tells it in his captivating new book, Sounds Wild and Broken, it is astonishing good fortune¡ªand a fearsome responsibility¡ªto be given this music and the ears to hear it with . . . Sounds Wild and Broken offer[s] one delight after another.¡± ¡ªKathleen Dean Moore, Scientific American ¡°[Haskell] is something of an idiosynchratic genius . . . [his] previous works leveraged two tools that established him as one of America¡¯s premier nature writers: his Zen-like ability to pay granular attention to what most people ignore and a lyrical writing style few scientists can muster . . . As he did in The Songs of Trees, Haskell enlivens the science by taking us on a journey, hopping from continent to continent. He wanders the mountains of southern France, treks Ecuador¡¯s Amazon jungle, and noses about eucalyptus forests in New South Wales, all to illustrate the connection between sound and place.¡± ¡ªOutside ¡°A moving paean to Earth¡¯s fraying soundtrack . . . [Haskell] traces, beautifully and brilliantly [¡¦] all the infinite serial interactions between communication and reception . . . [Sounds Wild and Broken is] a reminder that the narrow aural spectrum on which most of us operate, and the ways in which human life is led, blocks out the planet¡¯s great, orchestral richness.¡± ¡ªThe Guardian "A soaring panegyric not just to the human ear but also to the auditory equipment of every living being . . . It¡¯s beautiful, Haskell¡¯s devotion to his ears . . . Haskell wants us, above all, to listen, to use our glorious ciliary hairs for good. Those twitching hairs delivered us from pond scum, after all. Maybe, if properly attuned, they can deliver us from catastrophe." ¡ªLos Angeles Review of Books ¡°Haskell¡¯s voice is unique in contemporary nature writing . . . [he] creates a pleasing poetry of nature, his carefully crafted sentences luring readers in for the long haul . . . glorious.¡± ¡ªChapter16.org ¡°Unsurprisingly, Haskell is attuned to the music of written language; his sonic descriptions ring with the truth of poetry. . . Thanks to Haskell¡¯s profound prose, readers of Sounds Wild and Broken get to eavesdrop on cloistered conversations: rainforest mice trilling, croc offspring chirping, spiny lobsters yelping in self-defense. Hopefully, the hard-won insights he offers will ensure that against the din of outboard motors, excavators, TVs, turbines, and ATVs, nature¡¯s polyphony keeps being heard ...
  • Chapter Page Preface xi Part I Origins Primal sound and the ancient roots of hearing 3 Unity and diversity 9 Sensory bargains and biases 21 Part II The flourishing of animal sounds Predators, silence, wings 35 Flowers, oceans, milk 51 Part III Evolution's creative powers Air, water, wood 81 In the clamor 95 Sexuality and beauty 115 Vocal learning and culture 143 The imprints of deep time 171 Part IV Human music and belonging Bone, ivory, breath 193 Resonant spaces 215 Music, forest, body 237 Part V Diminishment, crisis, and injustice Forests 261 Oceans 291 Cities 321 Part VI Listening In community 353 In the deep past and future 373 Acknowledgments 379 Bibliography 383 Index 417
  • Part I Origins Primal sound and the ancient roots of hearing At first, sound on Earth was only of stone, water, lightning, and wind. An invitation: listen, and hear this primal Earth today. Wherever life's voices are hushed or absent we hear sounds largely unchanged since Earth cooled from its fiery start more than four billion years ago. Pressing against mountain peaks, wind yields a low and urgent roar, sometimes twisting into itself with a whip crack as it eddies. In deserts and ice fields, air hisses over sand and snow. On the ocean shore, waves slam and suck at pebbles, grit, and unyielding cliffs. Rain rattles and drums against rock and soil, and seethes into water. Rivers gurgle in their beds. Thunderstorms boom and the surface of the Earth echoes its reply. Sporadic tremors and eruptions of the underworld punctuate these voices of air and water, sounding with geologic growls and bellows. These sounds are powered by the sun, gravity, and the heat of the Earth. Sun-warmed air stirs the wind. Waves rise as gales strafe the water. Solar rays lift vapor, then gravity tugs rain back to Earth. Rivers, too, flow under gravity's imperative. The ocean tides rise and fall from the pull of the moon. Tectonic plates slide over the hot liquid heart of the planet. About three and a half billion years ago, sunlight found a new path to sound: life. Today all living voices, save for a few rock-eating bacteria, are animated by the sun. In the murmurs of cells and the voices of animals, we hear solar energy refracted into sound. Human language and music are part of this flow. We are acoustic conduits for plant-snared light as it escapes to air. Even the growl of machines is animated by the burn of long-buried sunlight. The first living sounds came from bacteria that sent infinitesimally quiet murmurs, sighs, and purrs into their watery surroundings. Bacterial sounds are now discernible to us only with the most sensitive modern equipment. A microphone in a quiet laboratory can pick up sounds from colonies of Bacillus subtilis, a species of bacteria commonly found in soils and mammalian guts. Amplified, these vibrations sound like the hiss of steam escaping from a tight valve. When a loudspeaker plays similar sounds back into flasks of bacteria, the cells' growth rate surges, an effect whose biochemical mechanism is as yet unknown. We can also "hear" bacteria by balancing them on the tip of a microscopic arm. This bacteria-coated strut is so small that every shudder from their cell surfaces makes it quiver. A laser beam directed at the arm records and measures these motions. This procedure reveals that bacteria are in constant shimmering motion, producing tremulous sound waves. The crests and troughs of the waves-the extent of the cell's vibratory movement-are only about five nanometers, one-thousandth of the width of the bacterial cell, and half a million times smaller than the deflections in my vocal folds when I speak. Cells make sound because they ...
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