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Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology

Professor Tom Rice

Professor Tom Rice (he/him/his)

Associate Professor
Anthropology

Professor Rice's research focuses on the anthropology of sound and listening. He studies the ways in which sound is made, perceived and interpreted in different cultural contexts, and the impacts and effects it is considered to have. His work contributes to the Anthropology of Sound and the wider interdisciplinary field of Sound Studies. He is an ethnographer and has conducted substantial projects on sound in a variety of field sites, with a particular focus on institutions, including hospitals, prisons and zoos. He also writes on core concepts in Sound Studies. 

 

Professor Rice is interested in the possibilities not only of writing about sound but also of working with and in sound through audio pieces. He has made programmes for the BBC World Service and Radio 4. One Hundred Ways of Listening, for instance, examines the variety of ways in which we listen each day, while also opening up ways in which we might expand and augment our auditory awareness - Illuminated - One Hundred Ways of Listening - BBC Sounds. Govindpuri Sound is an exploration of the sound environment of a slum settlement in Delhi from the perspectives of some of its residents - BBC World Service - The Documentary Podcast, Govindpuri Sound. The Art of Water Music is an exploration of the relationship between music and water - BBC Radio 4 Extra - The Art of Water Music.

 

His book Hearing and the Hospital: Sound, Listening, Knowledge and Experience (https://www.amazon.co.uk/Hearing-Hospital-Listening-Knowledge-Experience/dp/1907774246) is an ethnography of the auditory culture of a London hospital. It focuses on doctors' use of stethoscopic listening and other sound technologies in their diagnostic work, but also examines the techniques of listening used by nurses in their management of ward spaces and explores the ways in which the sounds of the hospital environment are woven into patients' experiences of hospitalisation. A further book, a cultural history of the stethoscope entitled Stethoscope: the making of a medical icon (co-authored with Anna Harris) was published in 2022 (https://www.waterstones.com/book/stethoscope/anna-harris/tom-rice/9781789146332). You can hear him speaking about it on Radio 4's Thinking Allowed here - https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m00230wm.

 

Between 2018 and 2021 Professor Rice was PI on the ESRC funded Transforming Social Science project 'Listening to the Zoo'. This project aimed to generate detailed knowledge about how sounds are woven into the experience of zoos for visitors, staff, people who live near zoos and for zoo animals themselves. It set considers how listening, and attending to different kinds and qualities of sound, can promote new forms of awareness of human and animal behaviour in the zoo context. As part of the project he made an experimental listening tour of an imaginary zoo. You can access it here: https://soundcloud.com/user-102738989/listening-to-the-zoo-audio-guide

 

Copies of many of his academic pieces can be found on his researchgate and academia.edu profiles (see links at on the left hand side of this page). He also has a blog which includes listening exercises, poems and short essays about sound - https://silver-disc-sr8w.squarespace.com/

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