In this article, I discuss community noise in Sao Paulo, Brazil’s wealthiest, largest, and most emblematic modern metropolis. I draw on ethnographic research conducted between 2012 and 2015 with the… Click to show full abstract
In this article, I discuss community noise in Sao Paulo, Brazil’s wealthiest, largest, and most emblematic modern metropolis. I draw on ethnographic research conducted between 2012 and 2015 with the antinoise agency and the police, the two main institutions responsible for dealing with community noise in the city. I present law enforcement assemblages as both unstable and heterogeneous, managed by people with different (and often diverging) expectations regarding how the city should sound. I expand on Bijsterveld’s notion of “paradox of control” and show that the heterogeneity of “noise” as an umbrella concept, the complexity of its scientific mensuration, and the unsteadiness of its legal encoding make this a particularly difficult object for the state to grasp. After describing the institutional flows inside the antinoise agency, I examine the troublesome ordeal of community noise for the Sao Paulo police department. The third section of the article introduces the concept of sound-politics, which I defi...
               
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