Modern academic criticism bursts with what Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
once termed paranoid readings -- interpretative feats that aim to
prove a point, persuade an audience, and subtly denigrate anyone
who disagrees. Driven by strategies of negation and suspicion, such
rhetoric tends to drown out softer-spoken reparative efforts, which
forego forceful argument in favor of ruminations on pleasure, love,
sentiment, reform, care, and accessibility.
Just Vibrations: The Purpose of Sounding Good calls for a time-out
in our serious games of critical exchange. Charting the divergent
paths of paranoid and reparative affects through illness
narratives, academic work, queer life, noise pollution, sonic
torture, and other touchy subjects, William Cheng exposes a host of
stubborn norms in our daily orientations toward scholarship, self,
and sound. How we choose to think about the perpetration and
tolerance of critical and acoustic offenses may ultimately lead us
down avenues of ethical ruin� or, if we choose, repair. With
recourse to experimental rhetoric, interdisciplinary discretion,
and the playful wisdoms of childhood, Cheng contends that
reparative attitudes toward music and musicology can serve as
barometers of better worlds.