[{"id":"8600","cataloger_name":["Cole,Mash"],"partnerInstitution":["Concordia University"],"collection_source_collection":["SpokenWeb Archive of the Present"],"source_collection_label":["SpokenWeb Archive of the Present"],"collection_contributing_unit":["Project Archives"],"source_collection_uri":[""],"collection_image_url":[""],"collection_source_collection_id":[""],"persistent_url":[""],"item_title":["SpokenWeb Listening Practice with Jentery Sayers on Zoom, 2020"],"item_title_source":["Cataloguer "],"item_title_note":["Jentery Sayers SW Listening Practice_2020-06-10 12.48.16 CU Team Meeting 488323124_zoom_1"],"item_production_context":["Internet recording"],"item_series_title":["SpokenWeb Archive of the Present"],"item_identifiers":["[]"],"creator_names":["Jentery Sayers"],"creator_names_search":["Jentery Sayers"],"creators":["[{\"url\":\"http://viaf.org/viaf/42150083796914941563\",\"name\":\"Jentery Sayers\",\"dates\":\"1978-\",\"notes\":\"\",\"nation\":[],\"role\":[\"Presenter\"]}]"],"contributors_names":["Jason Camlot"],"contributors_names_search":["Jason Camlot"],"contributors":["[{\"url\":\"http://viaf.org/viaf/90740324\",\"name\":\"Jason Camlot \",\"dates\":\"1967-\",\"notes\":\"\",\"nation\":[],\"role\":[\"Speaker\",\"Series organizer\"]}]"],"Series_organizer_name":["Jason Camlot "],"Speaker_name":["Jason Camlot "],"Performance_Date":[2020],"material_description":["[{\"side\":\"\",\"image\":\"Uploads/8600/Screenshot 2025-04-03 at 11.52.02 AM.png\",\"other\":\"\",\"extent\":\"\",\"AV_types\":\"\",\"tape_brand\":\"\",\"generations\":\"\",\"Conservation\":\"\",\"equalization\":\"\",\"playback_mode\":\"\",\"playing_speed\":\"\",\"sound_quality\":\"\",\"recording_type\":\"\",\"storage_capacity\":\"\",\"physical_condition\":\"\",\"track_configuration\":\"\",\"material_designation\":\"\",\"physical_composition\":\"\",\"accompanying_material\":\"\",\"other_physical_description\":\"\"}]"],"digital_description":["[{\"file_url\":\"https://youtu.be/fXUSiHO1Mjs\",\"file_path\":\"https://drive.google.com/drive/u/0/folders/1Q36NRzuGLTeHamuNm6do-n1j3CiVxJUi\",\"filename\":\"Jentery Sayers SW Listening Practice_2020-06-10 12.48.16 CU Team Meeting 488323124_zoom_1.mp4\",\"channel_field\":\"\",\"sample_rate\":\"\",\"duration\":\"\",\"precision\":\"\",\"size\":\"\",\"bitrate\":\"\",\"encoding\":\"\",\"contents\":\"\",\"notes\":\"\",\"title\":\"\",\"credit\":\"\",\"caption\":\"\",\"content_type\":\"Video Recording\",\"featured\":\"Yes\",\"public_access_url\":\"\"},{\"file_url\":\"\",\"file_path\":\"https://drive.google.com/drive/u/0/folders/1Q36NRzuGLTeHamuNm6do-n1j3CiVxJUi\",\"filename\":\"Screenshot 2025-04-03 at 11.52.02 AM\",\"channel_field\":\"\",\"sample_rate\":\"\",\"duration\":\"\",\"precision\":\"\",\"size\":\"\",\"bitrate\":\"\",\"encoding\":\"\",\"contents\":\"\",\"notes\":\"\",\"title\":\"\",\"credit\":\"\",\"caption\":\"\",\"content_type\":\"Photograph\",\"featured\":\"Yes\",\"public_access_url\":\"\"}]"],"Dates":["[{\"date\":\"2020-06-10\",\"type\":\"Performance Date\",\"notes\":\"\",\"source\":\"Digital file title \"}]"],"Location":["[{\"url\":\"https://www.openstreetmap.org/node/12741669181#map=18/45.494249/-73.576665\",\"venue\":\"Zoom\",\"notes\":\"This event was not in person at Concordia. However, our website requires a location to pull this video to it. As such, we have set Concordia as the default address, as it is the home of SpokenWeb, despite this being a fully online event. \",\"address\":\"1455 Blvd. De Maisonneuve Ouest, Montreal, Quebec H3G 1M8\",\"latitude\":\"45.4938202\",\"longitude\":\"-73.5790518\"}]"],"Address":["1455 Blvd. De Maisonneuve Ouest, Montreal, Quebec H3G 1M8"],"Venue":["Zoom"],"City":["Montreal, Quebec"],"contents":["In this weekly SpokenWeb Listening Practice, Dr. Jentery Sayers meets with members of the SpokenWeb network, including Jason Camlot, to do a close listening to a set of clips from Sayers' work on the influence of magnetic recording on the composition of fiction in the 20th century. "],"Note":["[]"],"Related_works":["[]"],"_version_":1853670549343961090,"timestamp":"2026-01-07T14:59:53.966Z","score":5.5285416},{"id":"10044","cataloger_name":["Ella,Hooper"],"partnerInstitution":["Concordia University"],"collection_source_collection":["SpokenWeb AV"],"source_collection_label":["SpokenWeb AV"],"collection_contributing_unit":["SpokenWeb"],"source_collection_uri":[""],"collection_image_url":["https://archiveofthepresent.spokenweb.ca/_nuxt/img/header-img_1000.fd7675f.png"],"collection_source_collection_description":["SpokenWeb Audio Visual Collection"],"collection_source_collection_id":["ArchiveOfThePresent"],"persistent_url":["https://archiveofthepresent.spokenweb.ca/"],"item_title":["SpokenWeb Events AV, Day 4 Teaching with Sound: Digital Audio Pedagogy Keynote, The Literary Audio Symposium, 5 December 2016"],"item_title_source":["https://spokenweb.ca/symposia/#/literary-audio-symposium"],"item_language":["English"],"item_production_context":["Classroom recording"],"item_series_title":["SpokenWeb Events"],"item_identifiers":["[]"],"creator_names":["Jason Camlot","Jentery Sayers"],"creator_names_search":["Jason Camlot","Jentery Sayers"],"creators":["[{\"url\":\"http://viaf.org/viaf/90740324\",\"name\":\"Jason Camlot\",\"dates\":\"1967-\",\"notes\":\"\",\"nation\":[],\"role\":[\"Producer\"]},{\"url\":\"http://viaf.org/viaf/42150083796914941563\",\"name\":\"Jentery Sayers\",\"dates\":\"1978-\",\"notes\":\"\",\"nation\":[],\"role\":[\"Speaker\"]}]"],"contributors":["[]"],"Production_Date":[2016],"material_description":["[]"],"digital_description":["[{\"file_url\":\"https://drive.google.com/drive/u/0/folders/17UrrNMEU4xBIyl6tQT8YFfB3D1xHFpCi\",\"file_path\":\"\",\"filename\":\"LS102522.MP3\",\"channel_field\":\"\",\"sample_rate\":\"44.1 kHz\",\"duration\":\"01:45:29\",\"precision\":\"\",\"size\":\"253,174,596 bytes\",\"bitrate\":\"\",\"encoding\":\"\",\"contents\":\"\",\"notes\":\"MP3 audio\",\"title\":\"LS102522\",\"credit\":\"\",\"caption\":\"\",\"content_type\":\"Sound Recording\",\"featured\":\"\",\"public_access_url\":\"\"}]"],"Dates":["[{\"date\":\"2016-12-05\",\"type\":\"Production Date\",\"notes\":\"\",\"source\":\"\"}]"],"Location":["[{\"url\":\"https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/22080572\",\"venue\":\"Concordia University McConnell Building\",\"notes\":\"\",\"address\":\"1400 Boulevard de Maisonneuve O, Montreal, QC, H3G 1M8\",\"latitude\":\"45.4968036\",\"longitude\":\"-73.57792785757887\"}]"],"Address":["1400 Boulevard de Maisonneuve O, Montreal, QC, H3G 1M8"],"Venue":["Concordia University McConnell Building"],"City":["Montreal, Quebec"],"Note":["[]"],"Related_works":["[]"],"_version_":1853670549985689600,"timestamp":"2026-01-07T14:59:54.597Z","contents":["JENTERY SAYERS (U Victoria)\n\n“Prototyping Impressions of Sound: Pedagogy across the Lab and Gallery”\n\nWhile many digital methodologies rely on tools for recording, analyzing, and visualizing sound, they may also prompt us to “remake” or prototype historical audio. Drawing on research conducted across a humanities lab and art gallery at the University of Victoria, this talk foregrounds the pedagogical affordances of such remaking. It focuses on what may have been the first magnetic recording, conducted in Denmark in 1898 during various experiments with volatile impressions on piano wire. Today, no audio from these experiments exists, and all visual evidence of them is speculative at best. However, enough detail remains to re-perform them with new technologies in the present moment. As a form of laboratory research, prototyping early audio becomes an opportunity to learn about its material composition as well as the embodied contexts of its reproduction. Installing these prototypes in a gallery setting encourages people to test them and also attend to how differences emerge across recordings. As a collaboration involving the arts and humanities, this prototyping process ultimately privileges a historical approach to sound that resists empiricism via screen-based tools and instead fosters a shared space for contingencies to speak.\n\nJentery Sayers bring expertise in digital pedagogy that involves teaching with sound in humanities contexts. He is Assistant Professor of English and Director of the Maker Lab in the Humanities at the University of Victoria. His sound studies publications include, “Making the Perfect Record: From Inscription to Impression in Early Magnetic Recording” (American Literature 85.4) and “An Archaeology of Edison’s Metal Box” (Victorian Review 38.2). He is the editor of two forthcoming collections, Making Humanities Matter (U. of Minnesota Press, Debates in the Digital Humanities series) and the Routledge Companion to Media Studies and Digital Humanities (Routledge). He is also the co-editor of Digital Pedagogy in the Humanities (Modern Language Association, with Davis, Gold, and Harris). At the University of Victoria, he teaches courses in media studies, digital studies, critical theory, and U.S. fiction after 1940.\n\nThe Literary Audio Symposium\n\nDigitized spoken-audio archives have proliferated over the past two decades, making a wide range of historically significant analog spoken recordings originally captured in different media formats accessible to listeners and scholars for the first time. Online repositories like PennSound and the Cylinder Archive Project, have begun to transform previously multi-format collections into a massive resource, the potential of which is just beginning to be realized. Still, many local audio archives with recordings that document literary events remain either inaccessible or, if digitized, largely disconnected from each other. Given the potential usefulness of online audio archives for scholars, teachers and the general public, The Literary Audio Symposium aims to explore possibilities around a coordinated and collaborative approach to literary historical study, digital development and critical and pedagogical engagement with diverse collections of spoken recordings.\n\nThe Symposium emerges from a joint venture of the AMP Lab and TAG Centre, COHDS: Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling, and the Concordia University Libraries, all based at Concordia, in collaboration with literary scholars, digital humanists and librarian/archivists from the University of Alberta, University of Calgary, and Simon Fraser University, and local community partners with unique analogue holdings.  Invited participants include colleagues from McGill U, U Victoria, U Texas, Austin, UCSB, and The Canadian Centre for Architecture.\n\nThis symposium will offer a productive scene of discussion and collaboration between academic researchers, librarians and archivists and emerging scholars and students, as well as community-based cultural and literary practitioners.  The primary aims of The Literary Audio Symposium are to share knowledge and provide discussion and debate about\n\n1) new forms of historical and critical scholarly engagement with coherent collections of spoken recordings;\n\n2) digital preservation, aggregation techniques, asset management and infrastructure to support sustainable access to diverse collections of archival spoken audio recordings;\n\n3) techniques and tools for searching and visualizing corpora of spoken audio (for features relevant to humanities research and pedagogy); and\n\n4) innovative ways of mobilizing digitized spoken and literary recordings within pedagogical and public contexts.\n\nThese objectives will be met through a structured set of keynote topic-organizing panels, tool demonstrations, case-study presentations, and collaborative workshop discussions, led by experts from a variety of relevant backgrounds including Literature, Library, Archives and Information Science, Oral History and Digital Storytelling, Computer Science, and Communications and Media History.  Each day of the Symposium will be initiated by a plenary presentation that frames key questions concerning one of the four key symposium themes, to be followed by hands-on presentations of relevant digital platforms and tools, case-study presentations that elaborate upon the day’s theme, followed by collaborative workshop discussion that will debate, reflect upon, and formulate new approaches to engaging with the implications of the day’s materials.\n\nFrom a range of relevant perspectives, The Literary Audio Symposium will enable the collaborative formulation of answers to core questions surrounding the preservation, digital presentation and critical use of humanities-oriented spoken audio materials, and temporal media holdings of cultural significance, in general.  Our work will benefit scholars, students and society by establishing processes for making a generally dispersed corpus of cultural heritage widely available in useful and meaningful ways."],"score":5.5285416}]