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Authors

  • Alan Edmundo Granados Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24275/GPTF5157

Abstract

In this article I describe sound ethnography, a procedure of data collection, analysis and interpretation that explores the sound and musical dimension of collective action, specifically in the protest march. With this procedure I try to answer the next question: In what way does sound contribute to the political and cultural objectives of the marches? Sound ethnography was developed from field work carried out in mass marches, which occurred in Mexico City, starting in 2014, mostly aligned to the left of the political spectrum. With this approach, which is part of the sensory turn in sociology and anthropology, I intend to contribute to the restitution of the sensory, affective and corporal dimensions of sociocultural processes, long ignored by the social sciences.

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Published

2024-11-21

Issue

Section

ARTÍCULOS DE INVESTIGACIÓN