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oapen-20.500.12657-251522021-11-09T09:23:45Z Chapter 3 Autophony: Listening to your Eyes Move Harris, Anna Yates-Doerr, Emily Labuski, Christine Autophony bic Book Industry Communication::J Society & social sciences::JF Society & culture: general I observed many instances of self-percussion during my fieldwork researching how listening to sounds is learned, taught and practiced in a Melbourne medical school and it’s connected teaching hospital. The students were sounding out their own bodies; practicing the technique while also feeling “dull” or “resonant” on their own body. This knowledge was then to be applied during their examination of patients, where dullness or resonance in the “wrong” place or in uneven distribution, may indicate disease. Tom Rice (2013) also observed similar acts of self-listening in a London hospital, in the form of auto-auscultation. The first sounds a medical student listens to, Rice found, when they buy their first stethoscope, are often their own. What does it mean to use your body as a case for others? Medical students (and indeed many other practitioners of the body) do this all the time. It is a common way of learning new bodily skills and bodily knowledge. 2019-05-10 09:18:21 2020-04-01T10:28:16Z 2020-04-01T10:28:16Z 2017 chapter 1004942 OCN: 1147274524 http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/25152 eng application/pdf n/a Autophony - listening to your eyes move.pdf Mattering Press The Ethnographic Case 10.28938/995527744 10.28938/995527744 b8c2f5f9-9a7b-4028-ae62-dc531f760dbc 2de17d3f-e5b0-40bc-b5d1-84af9b31a2c4 178e65b9-dd53-4922-b85c-0aaa74fce079 da087c60-8432-4f58-b2dd-747fc1a60025 European Research Council (ERC) ScholarLed Dutch Research Council (NWO) 4 Manchester 678390 Vici H2020 European Research Council H2020 Excellent Science - European Research Council Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research open access
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English
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I observed many instances of self-percussion during my fieldwork researching how listening
to sounds is learned, taught and practiced in a Melbourne medical school and it’s connected
teaching hospital. The students were sounding out their own bodies; practicing the
technique while also feeling “dull” or “resonant” on their own body. This knowledge was
then to be applied during their examination of patients, where dullness or resonance in the
“wrong” place or in uneven distribution, may indicate disease. Tom Rice (2013) also
observed similar acts of self-listening in a London hospital, in the form of auto-auscultation.
The first sounds a medical student listens to, Rice found, when they buy their first
stethoscope, are often their own. What does it mean to use your body as a case for others?
Medical students (and indeed many other practitioners of the body) do this all the time. It is
a common way of learning new bodily skills and bodily knowledge.
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Mattering Press
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2019
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