{"id":34827,"date":"2022-11-30T17:00:21","date_gmt":"2022-11-30T16:00:21","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/?p=34827"},"modified":"2022-12-06T12:50:56","modified_gmt":"2022-12-06T11:50:56","slug":"offset","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/offset\/","title":{"rendered":"Offset"},"content":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":5,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"inline_featured_image":false,"footnotes":""},"project":[353,846],"project_type":[725,730,726,727],"class_list":["post-34827","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","project-online-publications","project-time-after-time","project_type-formats","project_type-artistic-research","project_type-text","project_type-video"],"acf":{"bgcolor":"has-bg-custom","bgcolor_custom":"rgb(0,0,0)","custom_color_css_variable":"","content_type":[{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","acfe_flexible_layout_title":"Text","bgcolor":"has-bg-grey","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":12,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"<h6><span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Acknowledging Country<\/span><\/h6>\r\n<p class=\"is-size-6\"><em>Offset<\/em> includes sound and vision of \u203aFootscray\u2039 and surrounds in the inner West of Naarm (\u203aMelbourne\u2039, \u203aAustralia\u2039).<\/p>\r\n<p class=\"is-size-6\">I am an uninvited guest on this stolen Country where I live, work, record and listen. The Traditional Owners of this place are the Marin Balluk peoples of the Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung. I also visit and sometimes record on Boon Wurrung\/Bunurong Country. I pay my respects to their Elders, past and present, and to the elders and custodians of the lands and waters where you are.<\/p>\r\n<p class=\"is-size-6\">I also acknowledge the owners and custodians of the lands and waters that connect us, including a remote server on Sewee land, Turtle Island, where this work digitally occupies.<\/p>\r\n&nbsp;"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","acfe_flexible_layout_title":"Text","bgcolor":"has-bg-grey","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":12,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"<h6><span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Click on each of the visuals below to mute\/unmute the sound components of this piece. They have been designed for desktop and laptop viewing.<\/span><\/h6>"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_iframe","acfe_flexible_layout_title":"Iframe","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":12,"iframe_embed":"https:\/\/offset-bf-solitude.netlify.app\/zero"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","acfe_flexible_layout_title":"Text","bgcolor":"has-bg-grey","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":12,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"The in-built-in digital clock ticks upwards in discrete measures, counting the seconds elapsed since the recording began. I create a linear reel of digital \u00bb\u203atape\u00ab that, when I load it into my DAW (Digital Audio Workstation), will span past the width of my computer screen.\r\n\r\nAligning rhythmic sounds like my footsteps to the DAW\u2019s linear, gridded clock, I will find the beats-per-minute time signature of this recording. I will fast-forward past boredom, and find a compelling interval where I\u2019ll slow the playback rate and highlight a clip to be replayed and replayed. I skip backward and forward through \u00bbinfinitely supple\u00ab digital time.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">1<\/sup> A day, and more, is listenable and skippable and I can see and store more time than I can comprehend. This is the field recordists\u2019 \u00bbglut of data,\u00ab a glut of time where practitioners\u2019 libraries swell: if played in real time, my recordings would span longer than my career.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">2<\/sup>\r\n\r\nI divide time into discrete portions and measure its size in gigabytes and its length in days, hours, minutes, seconds and milliseconds. Feeling restless or sore in the field, I become fixed on the seconds ticking upwards and tell myself to hold still for just another minute, or more. More \u00bbgold\u00ab added to the field recording library.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">3<\/sup> But the homogenous regularity of that accumulating clock time cannot measure the experiential duration of my attention that I register more expansively when I\u2019m not watching the clock.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">4<\/sup>\r\n\r\nManipulating and presenting field recordings on the web, I write JavaScript code \u2013 some of which uses the Date object which stamps \u00bba single moment in time\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">5<\/sup> measured in milliseconds since the \u203aepoch\u2039 of 00:00:00 midnight on January 1, 1970 (also known as the Unix timestamp). This millisecond-measured object is parsed into a string to write something like this:\r\n<p id=\"datestring\"><span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Sun Aug 14 2022 11:37:25 GMT+1000 (Australian Eastern Standard Time)<\/span><sup class=\"is-footnote\">6<\/sup><\/p>\r\nThat time string is localized relative to the time information provided by my computer. Or, if I publish this code on the web, it\u2019s localized to the time information provided by whatever device is accessing the webpage. In other words, your device knows where you are and what time zone that places you in. To display my local time relative to yours, I manipulate <span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Date<\/span>. I wrestle with the problems of working with timezones<sup class=\"is-footnote\">7<\/sup> and use JavaScript methods such as <span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">getTimezoneOffset<\/span>, which tells me the difference between a date evaluated in UTC versus the local timezone.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">8<\/sup> I find our relative temporal offset from the zeroed \u00bbmiddle\u00ab timezone standard UTC+00."},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_iframe","acfe_flexible_layout_title":"Iframe","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":12,"iframe_embed":"https:\/\/offset-bf-solitude.netlify.app\/texttime"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","acfe_flexible_layout_title":"Text","bgcolor":"has-bg-grey","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":12,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"Michelle Bastian explains that although clock time measures the length of a day, \u00bbatomic clocks cannot synchronize precisely with the rotation of the Earth, since this rotation is variable.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">9<\/sup> So, UTC or Coordinated Universal Time is a negotiated version of clock time, constructed from solar time, atomic time and the ongoing offset of \u00bbleap seconds.\u00ab Bastian says that \u00bbtelling the time\u00ab is not a factual description, but rather a performative act. She proposes a move away from established conventions of reading mechanical or digital time as objective measures, in favor of a broader definition of the clock:\r\n<p class=\"quote is-intended\">A device that signals change in order for its users to maintain an awareness of, and thus be able to coordinate themselves with, what is significant to them.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">10<\/sup><\/p>\r\nDigital time on recording devices, DAWs and on the web are tools of measuring and manipulating clock time, and they are devices I use in performative acts of \u00bbtelling time.\u00ab But my body is the clock with which I measure local place, enacting Donna Haraway\u2019s \u00bbview from a body, always a complex, contradictory, structuring and structured body.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">11<\/sup> I trace Footscray through repeated movement and I sense place-temporalities through my view from a body via hunger, thirst, tiredness, restlessness. Some rhythmic actions like digging and walking are repetitive and rhythmic and can become percussive and seductively constant. I entrain myself to place; my footfall, heartbeat, breath, and sleep are synced to the night\/day, on- and off-peak, dawn and evening chorus and seasonal rhythms.\r\n\r\nI know \u00bbwhen\u00ab I am by noticing changing colors of skies and plants, arrivals and departures of fledgling birds, invoking Glen Morrison who says \u00bbspaces become better known as places as they become \u203atime-thickened\u2039.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">12<\/sup> In this time-thickening of space into place into neighborhood, I am a \u00bbrhythmanalyst\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">13<\/sup> attentive to place-rhythms that are paradoxically both ever-changing through processes of becoming, but also consistent and stabilized by steady patterns of flow.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">14<\/sup>"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_iframe","acfe_flexible_layout_title":"Iframe","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":12,"iframe_embed":"https:\/\/offset-bf-solitude.netlify.app\/bodyclock"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","acfe_flexible_layout_title":"Text","bgcolor":"has-bg-grey","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":12,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"My listenings in place intensify my noticing of \u00bbbackground\u00ab ambience, the repetitive,<sup class=\"is-footnote\">15<\/sup> rhythmic sounds; familiar, in the composition of place, this is the percussive rhythm to which my everyday is entrained. I sometimes treat place as \u00bbnature\u00ab which, when viewed as a \u00bbsubstance\u00ab might appear \u00bbcomfortingly present, endless, normal, straight.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">16<\/sup> I reach for audio-gathering equipment. I return to familiar places, and wait, and hope for a repeat performance, sometimes revealing an extractive white colonialist instinct that is \u00bbpossessive and protective about asset accumulation and ownership.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">17<\/sup> Place eludes<sup class=\"is-footnote\">18<\/sup> my desire for capture and control, and I leave with an empty memory card.\r\n\r\nThe recording device displays its void:\r\n\r\n00:00:00\r\n\r\nZero-zero. In linear temporal media these zeroes signal a beginning, the null-duration of audio-visuals not-yet-experienced. On a digital clock: midnight, the \u00bbmiddle\u00ab of the night, ending one day and beginning the next. On a recording device: data accumulation not-yet begun. On a digital media playhead: a paused start. A frontier zero time punctuation in the ideology of the roll-out of linear time.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">19<\/sup>\r\n\r\nCyclical, rhythmic place \u00bbhas nothing to do with good old reliable constancy\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">20<\/sup> and does not conform to linear expectations. \u00bbNature\u00ab\u202fis not a \u00bbstable background\u00ab to human life, a confused misconception reinforced by Western cultural concepts of an abstract clock like UTC which \u2013 despite ecological crises \u2013 \u00bbproblematically projects an unending future no matter the context.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">21<\/sup> Places in \u00bbAustralia\u00ab are not static locations or settings. Rather, \u00bbthese are places that are best understood as endless events \u2026 fluid or airy or ethereal and constantly altering.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">22<\/sup> In white settler-colonial imaginings, \u00bbauthentic Australian identity\u00ab is \u00bbset against the great silence of the bush\u00ab, but \u00bbjust as the land was not \u203aempty\u2039 nor \u203abelonging to no-one\u2039, neither was the soundscape silent.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">23<\/sup>\r\n<p class=\"quote is-intended\">The English colonization of Australia was premised on \u00bbuninhabited,\u00ab \u00bbempty land\u00ab deemed \u00bbTerra Nullius\u00ab: land without signs of ownership, occupation and government visible to the colonizers. It developed into an effort to permanently extinguish indigenous people: their bodies, identities, cultures, languages; their knowledges. Genocide.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">24<\/sup><\/p>\r\nMy generational connections to this continent are rooted in English and Irish convict-settler ancestry based on theft and possession that has been \u00bbjealously guarded by white Australians\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">25<\/sup> while \u00bbthe white body was the norm and measure for identifying who could belong.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">26<\/sup> My white, colonizing body should not be the measurement scale of this place. Reflecting on the extractivism inherent in settler-colonial formations of land, Dan Tout reminds us that settler-colonies are premised on \u00bbthe foundational projection of permanent territorial sovereignty;\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">27<\/sup> settlers arrive uninvited and then outstay their welcome, if they were ever welcomed at all. Home is not permanent, and a claim made on place doesn\u2019t grant ongoing access. Movement is vital to place-knowledge: \u00bbCountry calls for activity; it needs rousing engagement more than it needs settlement.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">28<\/sup>\r\n\r\nI do my best to enact \u00bbrousing engagement\u00ab through acts of care and active participation in place \u2013 led by listening. I try to reject and resist extractive and accumulative impulses. A library of field recordings will always be incomplete, I cannot fully represent or capture place, and I cannot grasp for an \u00bbending\u00ab where the timeline of place-listening is complete.\r\n\r\nListening to and with place, I notice more-than-human temporalities that elude measurement, prediction, expectation, control. A frustrating escalation of pigeon coos that vibrate from all sides. Worms \u00bbsquelch and schlurp\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">29<\/sup> when I\u2019m turning the compost. Rustling wetland reeds. A thrilling portamento of a faraway currawong. A drone of traffic and machine diggers. The crack of a seed pod and the scatter of its insides. My hesitating breaths. I take up Anna Tsing\u2019s assemblage thinking:\r\n<p class=\"quote\">Patterns of unintentional coordination develop in assemblages. To notice such patterns means watching the interplay of temporal rhythms and scales in the divergent lifeways that gather.<sup class=\"is-footnote\">30<\/sup><\/p>\r\nImagining futures outside capitalism\u2019s monodirectional and cumulative \u00bbprogress stories,\u00ab Tsing turns instead toward \u00bbtemporal polyphony\u00ab of third nature: \u00bbopen-ended assemblages of entangled ways of life, as these coalesce in coordination across many kinds of temporal rhythms.\u00ab<sup class=\"is-footnote\">31<\/sup> I continue assembling temporal rhythms between body-listening, place-listening and digital-listening. I sow seeds. I feel elongated evenings as seasons shift toward blooming flowers. I watch a waxing moon. I dig with worms. I gather seeds. These listenings cannot be felt in the web browser. But my use of web coding informs my understandings of place, and vice-versa. Moon phases can be measured in fractions. Sunset time can be checked as a percentage difference from the 24-hour hundred percent. These clock time measures are outside my body\u2019s measures, but they facilitate me putting shapes around my listenings. I try to coalesce varied and sometimes contradictory, sometimes complementary senses of time, allowing for forms of knowledge beyond measurement but within embodied comprehension."},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_iframe","acfe_flexible_layout_title":"Iframe","bgcolor":"","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":12,"iframe_embed":"https:\/\/offset-bf-solitude.netlify.app\/seasonal"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","acfe_flexible_layout_title":"Text","bgcolor":"has-bg-grey","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":12,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"Here and now, it\u2019s early afternoon. My lunch is digesting and making me feel sluggish. I feel a slight pain in my neck. Out my lounge-room window, I can see large white and gray clouds blocking out the formerly blue sky, signaling the rain that I know is forecast for this evening. My nose and eyes feel itchy with road dust and pollen. I perceive time through my body, an in- and external \u00bboffset\u00ab that places me here and now.\r\n\r\nHere and now, read with the JavaScript method <span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">Date.now()<\/span>, is 1662688115662 milliseconds (since the Unix timestamp \u00bbepoch\u00ab) \u2013 a number I cannot properly read or understand, but I can manipulate. By the time you read this, millions or billions of milliseconds will have accumulated and been added to that number. To program JavaScript events, I calculate time in thousands: 60,000 milliseconds per minute, 3,600,000 per hour. I slowly backtrack with my arrow key to trace each zero, counting aloud as I code: one-two-three zeroes per thousand milliseconds for one second, itself a measure of time I can only fallibly measure as a verbally-counted \u00bbMississippi.\u00ab\r\n\r\nTo check my code, I refresh the browser window and the scripted sequence I programmed resets to its frontier zero \u2013 an epoch <span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">window.onload<\/span> event. I listen again to the sound clips and rewatch the videos and graphics I\u2019ve programmed. They loop. They collide. They repeat. They are familiar but become uncanny through their looping repetition. I have hidden \u2013 as I often do \u2013 the default appearance of the HTML Audio Object, which would usually display a play\/pause interface, a linear representation of the media file, and a timestamp of its <span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">currentTime<\/span> elapsed in playback and its total duration. By obfuscating these interactive playback controls, I cannot watch the seconds-elapsed-since-00:00:00 counter. Watching and listening in this browser window, I return to embodied durational attention.\r\n\r\nWhile digital sound\u2019s linearity and web time\u2019s millisecond-measures can feel limiting, these tools also open possibilities for expansive and cyclical listenings. In web playback algorithms driven by clock time, in turn driven by my embodied listenings in place, I experience assemblages of time, sound and place \u2013 Tsing\u2019s \u00bbunintentional coordination\u00ab \u2013 that sit outside of measurable progress and accumulation.\r\n\r\nTemporal assemblages are unfolding knowledges of time that I cannot fully know or perceive. Again, I entrain myself to rhythms of place. I listen.\r\n\r\nIt\u2019s now tomorrow, and it\u2019s morning. The ground is wet from the promises met by yesterday\u2019s clouds.\r\n\r\nI continue listening and attending to my <span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">now()<\/span>."},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_txt","acfe_flexible_layout_title":"Text","bgcolor":"has-bg-grey","bgcolor_custom":"","layout_col_size":12,"txt_cols":"is-1-txtcol","txt":"<p class=\"is-size-6\"><span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\"><strong>BF<\/strong> is a fledgling. They garden, listen, and learn on Marin Balluk Wurundjeri Country.<\/span><\/p>"},{"acf_fc_layout":"content_footnotes","acfe_flexible_layout_title":"Fu\u00dfnoten","bgcolor":"has-bg-grey","footnotes_list_hide_numbers":false,"footnotes":[{"footnote":"John Potts: <em>The New Time and Space<\/em>. London\r\n2015, p. 15."},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Kelly Servick: \u00bbEavesdropping on Ecosystems,\u00ab in: <em>Science 343 (6175) <\/em>(2014), p. 837. <a href=\"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1126\/science.343.6175.1077-b\">https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1126\/science.343.6175.1077-b<\/a><\/p>"},{"footnote":"Sound artist and field recordist Camilla Hannan encourages producers to \u00bbwait a couple of minutes longer than you\u2019re comfortable \u2026 because that\u2019s when you get the gold,\u00ab, in: \u00bbSeason 2, Episode \u203aIt\u2019s All in the Detail,\u2039\u00ab\u00a0in: Audiocraft, 2017, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.audiocraft.com.au\/audiocraft-podcast-season-2-ep-4\">https:\/\/www.audiocraft.com.au\/audiocraft-podcast-season-2-ep-4<\/a>."},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Henri Bergson: <em>Time and Free Will: An Essay on the Immediate Data of Consciousness.<\/em> <em>Duration and Simultaneity<\/em>. Indianapolis, New York, and Kansas City 1913\/1965, p. 57.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u00bbDate - JavaScript.\u00ab MDN Web Docs. 2022. <a href=\"https:\/\/developer.mozilla.org\/en-US\/docs\/Web\/JavaScript\/Reference\/Global_Objects\/Date\">https:\/\/developer.mozilla.org\/en-US\/docs\/Web\/JavaScript\/Reference\/Global_Objects\/Date<\/a>.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Since I began writing this, I am now in Australian Eastern Daylight Time, or GMT+1100 \u2013 a seasonal temporal offset that places me further out of sync with local place.<\/p>\r\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Tom Scott, \u00bbThe Problem with Time and Timezones,\u00ab in: <em>Computerphile<\/em>, 2013, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=-5wpm-gesOY\">https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=-5wpm-gesOY<\/a>.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">MDN, \u00bbDate.Prototype.GetTimezoneOffset() \u2013 JavaScript,\u00ab MDN Web Docs, 2022, <a href=\"https:\/\/developer.mozilla.org\/en-US\/docs\/Web\/JavaScript\/Reference\/Global_Objects\/Date\/getTimezoneOffset\">https:\/\/developer.mozilla.org\/en-US\/docs\/Web\/JavaScript\/Reference\/Global_Objects\/Date\/getTimezoneOffset<\/a>.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Michelle Bastian: \u00bbFatally Confused: Telling the Time in the Midst of Ecological Crises,\u00ab in:<em> Environmental Philosophy 9 (1)<\/em>, 2012, p. 30<em>.<\/em><\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Ibid, p. 31.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Donna Haraway: \u00bbSituated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective,\u00ab in: <em>Feminist Studies<\/em> 14, no. 3 (1988): p. 575, <a href=\"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.2307\/3178066\">https:\/\/doi.org\/10.2307\/3178066<\/a>, p. 589.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"Glenn Morrison: \u00bbPerceiving the World on a Walk,\u00ab in: <em>Writing Home<\/em>, 2017, p. 15."},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Henri Lefebvre: <em>Rhythmanalysis: Space, Time and Everyday Life<\/em>. London and New York 2004, p. 19.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Tim Edensor: \u00bbIntroduction: Thinking about Rhythm and Space,\u00bb in:<em> Geographies of Rhythm: Nature, Place, Mobilities and Bodies<\/em>, 2010, p. 3.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Such as the \u00bbrepetition effect,\u00ab described by Jean-Fran\u00e7ois Augoyard and Henry Torgue in <em>Sonic Experience: A Guide to Everyday Sounds<\/em> (Montreal 2005), p. 90, as a \u00bbphenomena of return, reprise, and enrichment by accumulation\u00ab when perceiving the reappearance of identical sound occurrences.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Timothy Morton: <em>Dark Ecology: For a Logic of Future Coexistence<\/em>. New York 2016, p. 56.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"Aileen Moreton-Robinson: <em>The White Possessive<\/em>, Minneapolis 2016, p. 67."},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">I continue to be informed by the illustrative accounts of environmental agency and \u00bbkin,\u00ab such as in the work of AM Kanngieser and Zoe Todd: \u00bbFrom Environmental Case Study To Environmental Kin Study,\u00ab in: <em>History and Theory<\/em> 59, no. 3 (2020): pp. 385\u201393, <a href=\"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1111\/hith.12166\">https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1111\/hith.12166<\/a>. and AM Kanngieser, \u00bbListening as Taking-Leave (Listening as Method),\u00ab in: <em>The Seedbox<\/em>, 2021, <a href=\"https:\/\/theseedbox.se\/blog\/listening-as-taking-leave\">https:\/\/theseedbox.se\/blog\/listening-as-taking-leave<\/a>.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Deborah Bird Rose: \u00bbReflections on the Zone of the Incomplete\u00ab in: <em>Cryopolitics: Frozen Life in a Melting World<\/em>, edited by Joanna Radin and Emma Kowal, Cambridge MA 2017, pp. 147\u20138.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Morton: 2016, p. 10.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Bastian: 2012, p. 39.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Gibson: 2015, p. 22.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Jane Belfrage: \u00bbThe Great Australian Silence: Knowing, Colonising and Gendering Acoustic Space\u00ab (La Trobe University, 1993), <a href=\"http:\/\/hdl.handle.net\/1959.9\/506018\">http:\/\/hdl.handle.net\/1959.9\/506018<\/a>., p. 80.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Ibid, p. 6.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"Moreton-Robinson: 2016, p. 7."},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Ibid, p. 5.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Dan Tout: \u00bbJuukan Gorge Destruction: Extractivism and the Australian Settler-Colonial Imagination,\u00ab in: Arena, 2020, <a href=\"https:\/\/arena.org.au\/juukan-gorge-destruction-extractivism-and-the-australian-settler-colonial-imagination\/\">https:\/\/arena.org.au\/juukan-gorge-destruction-extractivism-and-the-australian-settler-colonial-imagination\/<\/a>.<\/p>"},{"footnote":"<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Gibson, 2015, p. 22.<\/p>\r\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><\/p>"},{"footnote":"Norie Neumark imitates her and Maria Miranda's worm companions in \u00bbThe Voices of Wormy Compost: Embodiment, Affect and More-than-Sound,\u00ab in: <em>More-than-Sound<\/em> (YouTube, November 12, 2021), <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=703LKKPuGRA\">https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=703LKKPuGRA<\/a>."},{"footnote":"Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing: T<em>he Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins<\/em>, Princeton and Oxford 2015, p. 23."},{"footnote":"Ibid, p. viii."}]}],"intro_preview_headline":"BF","intro_preview_txt":"<span class=\"has-font-maison-neue\" style=\"font-family: 'Maison Neue';\">For <em>Solitude Journal<\/em>, researcher and audio producer BF reflects on their fluctuating, durational, and embodied local position in time and place, entangled with web time and linear clock time. This writing, and the audio-visual elements presented on the web version of this issue, draw from <em>Local Time<\/em>, their ongoing ecological listening project. For the past few years, they have been recording, listening, and programming creatively with their local neighbourhood in and around \u00bb\u203aFootscray,\u00ab\u2039 which is in the inner Western suburbs of Naarm or \u00bb\u203aMelbourne\u2039,\u00ab \u00bb\u203aAustralia\u2039.\u00ab Although they align sound recordings in the linear, gridded clocks of digital audio workstations and the millisecond-measures of JavaScript, they challenge temporalities of place(s) and acknowledge that contrary to white settler-colonial imaginings, places are not static locations, settings, or temporalities.<\/span>","intro_preview_img":35207,"post_id_old":"","post_author":"","post_subtitle":"BF","post_preview_img_hide_on_single":true,"post_txt_old":"","post_pdf":"","post_copyright":"ccl_default","translated_post":false,"translations":null,"post_copyright_individual":"","post_related_posts":[35189,35175,35125],"related_posts_post":""},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/34827","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=34827"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/34827\/revisions"}],"acf:post":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/35125"},{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/35175"},{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/35189"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=34827"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"project","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/project?post=34827"},{"taxonomy":"project_type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.akademie-solitude.de\/de\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/project_type?post=34827"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}