The Performative Power of Vocality


Book cover of The Performative Power of Vocality

The Performative Power of Vocality

By Virginie Magnat

The Performative Power of Vocality offers a fresh perspective on voice as a subject of critical inquiry by employing an interdisciplinary and cross-cultural approach.

Conventional treatment of voice in theatre and performance studies too often regards it as a subcategory of actor training, associated with the established methods that have shaped voice pedagogy within Western theatre schools, conservatories, and universities. This monograph significantly deviates from these dominant models through its investigation of the non-discursive, material, and affective efficacy of vocality, with a focus on orally transmitted vocal traditions. Drawing from her performance training, research collaborations, and commitment to cultural diversity, Magnat proposes a dialogical approach to vocality. Inclusive of established, current, and emerging research perspectives, this approach sheds light on the role of vocality as a vital source of embodied knowledge, creativity, and well-being grounded in process, practice, and place, as well as a form of social and political agency.

An excellent resource for qualitative researchers, artist-scholars, and activists committed to decolonization, cultural revitalization, and social justice, this book opens up new avenues of understanding across Indigenous and Western philosophy, performance studies, musicology, ethnomusicology, sound and voice studies, anthropology, sociology, phenomenology, cognitive science, physics, ecology, and biomedicine.

Book Information

Further Information

Addressed to qualitative researchers, artist-scholars, and activists committed to decolonization, cultural revitalization, and social justice, The Performative Power of Vocality (Routledge 2020) explores the non-verbal, non-semantic, non-discursive material and affective efficacy of vocality, with a particular focus on orally transmitted vocal traditions.

In response to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Calls to Action addressed to researchers and educators, I seek to open a dialogical space inclusive and respectful of Indigenous ontologies, epistemologies, and methodologies. Drawing from my research collaboration with the Indigenous Advisory Committee formed for this project, and building upon the work of Vine Deloria Jr., Gregory Cajete, Linda Tuhiwai Smith, Shawn Wilson, Margaret Kovach, Manulani Aluli-Meyer, Jill Carter, Dylan Robinson, and Dolleen Manning, among other Indigenous scholars, I consider vocality from the multiplicity of perspectives offered by Indigenous and Western philosophy, sound and voice studies, musicology, ethnomusicology, performance studies, anthropology, sociology, phenomenology, cognitive science, physics, ecology, and biomedicine.

From an Indigenous perspective, singing traditional songs requires being in relation with the voices of ancestors and the natural world, as cultural knowledge is shared within and across communities inclusive of other/more-than-human agents. The Performative Power of Vocality offers an interdisciplinary and cross-cultural approach to vocality beyond notions of voice as a conceptual abstraction or a metaphor, and beyond its association with speech and language, making vocality exclusively human, hence problematically anthropocentric. I discuss my embodied research on vocality that entails (re-)learning the songs of my Occitan ancestors, and ask how experiencing resonance as relationality and reciprocity might strengthen relationship to our community and our natural environment, enhance health and well-being, reconnect us to our cultural heritage, and foster intercultural understanding and social justice.

This book is based on research funded by an Insight Grant ($94,090) and a Connection Grant ($24,745) from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, as well as by a UBC Hampton Grant ($3,000).

Video

The first chapter of the book ('Performance, Embodiment and Vocality', pages 19-20) references the documentary film Experiencing Resonance as a Practice of Ritual Engagement.

You can watch the film here: www.icer.ok.ubc.ca/research/