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Foreword

In the 1990s, I decided to combine three of my areas of interest: electroacoustic music, voice and gender studies. In the Netherlands, women’s and gender studies were flourishing and feminist musicology was an upcoming theme, but no one else seemed to be interested in this combination of gender and electroacoustic music; it felt like a lonely endeavour. Then I went to Canada to present a paper in the ICMC ’95 conference in Banff, where gender issues was one of the themes for which submissions were invited and encouraged, and also visited Montréal. It felt like a completely different situation, another world. There, I didn’t have to explain why it was important or interesting to do this research. And I met others who were also involved in this field. The work of Andra McCartney was particularly important, as was meeting her in person. In her papers, articles, master thesis and doctoral dissertation, she carefully addressed the topic of women and electroacoustic music on different levels, analyzing electroacoustic works of various women composers, profoundly embedded in feminist theory, as can be seen in this reissue of eContact! 1.1 — Women in Electroacoustics 1.

As I argued in my doctoral dissertation “The Electronic Cry: Voice and gender in electroacoustic music”, different feminist approaches can be discerned in the research of Andra McCartney (Bosma 2013, 20–21). For example, in McCartney’s own 1997 thesis, “Creating Worlds for my Music to Exist: How women composers of electroacoustic music make place for their voices,” the experiences and practices of fourteen Canadian women composers of electroacoustic music are discussed within a framework of feminist theory related to technology and to musicology. In addition, the gendering of electroacoustic music in the language and imagery of publications and software, in institutional processes and in individual practices, is discussed. It does not merely report negative experiences of women in the electronic music world but goes on to describe the positive feminine practices of those women when composing or teaching electronic music. Thus, McCartney focused on women composers, criticized the sexism of the institutions and practices of the electronic music world, brought positive and specifically feminine practices to the fore, analyzed and criticized gender constructions and metaphors in the discourse of electroacoustic music, and elaborated on the rich, multifaceted work of the women composers.

In this way, she combined the three feminist approaches, focused on equality, difference and deconstruction, respectively, that I had discussed in my contribution to eContact! 1.1 in 1998 (“Gender and Electroacoustics”), according to a framework offered by Rosemary Buikema and Anneke Smelik (1993/1995). The second and the third of these feminist positions can be considered as a critique on the previous ones. The numbering, and their implied critiques, suggest a temporal order, like the first, second and third wave, and even a hierarchy. However, I would like to emphasize their simultaneity and interdependence; and to conceive this scheme not as subsequent waves, but as a field of coexistent feminist possibilities, in which each may visit various positions. I find this particularly relevant to the field of electroacoustic music: a multiplicity of positions seems almost inherent for women in electroacoustic music, because of the hybridity of their backgrounds, career profiles and identification(s). Addressing feminist issues from different perspectives, going back and forth between different positions, has become even more important in the contemporary polarized cultural-political climate. Rather than taking one position or strategy, as a feminist one may “work through” a multidimensional terrain of gender, femininity, womanity and sexual difference, with its multiple paradoxes and contradictions. 1[1. Such “working through” is a psychoanalytically inspired conscious and unconscious praxis evoked by feminist theorist and philosopher Rosi Braidotti.] It is such a position of multiplicity that Andra McCartney refers to when she states in this issue of eContact!:

Teresa de Lauretis talks of the “doubled consciousness” of women who work with technology, who are at once situated as the subject, rational, ordering reality with technology — as well as stereotypically constructed as the object, irrational, close to Nature. de Lauretis says that this position keeps women filmmakers (and, I would add, electroacoustic composers), always on the edge of these states of mind and always questioning them. (McCartney 1998)

This is not to say that all women feel comfortable with all feminist positions. In particular, the positioning of women as a separate category, for example with concerts or records with music of women composers only, or with positive discrimination, is often resisted. Or, as Pascale Trudel states in the same issue of eContact!: “I look forward to the day we will be referred to as ‘composers’, and not as ‘women composers’” (Trudel 1998). This may be considered a phenomenon of disidentification with the stereotypical figure of Woman or of a desire to discard gender as a confining and repressive system of stereotypical roles, qualities, identifications and power relations. However, to change the representations, positions, roles and opportunities of women, to change patriarchal and phallogocentric structures, it is not enough to simply change rules and regulations or to deny gender or sexual difference. Because these are deeply, persistently and, to a large extent, unconsciously constitutive of subjectivity, intersubjectivity and culture, tackling this requires “working through” on cultural, social and psychological levels, changing experiences and identifications, of women and of other people. Wandering through a field of feminist positions may help this process without getting stuck in new dogmas. Electroacoustic music is a great area for such journeys, whether as composing, performing or listening subjects.

Amsterdam, 7 March 2022

Bibliography

Bosma, Hannah. “Male and Female Voices in Computer Music.” ICMC 1995. Proceedings of the 21st International Computer Music Conference (Banff AB, Canada: Banff Centre for the Arts, 3–7 September 1995), pp. 139–143. http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.bbp2372.1995.038

_____. “Gender and Electroacoustics.” eContact! 1.1 — Femmes en électroacoustique 1 / Women in Electroacoustics 1 (March 1998, March 2022). https://econtact.ca/1_1/bosma_gender.html

_____. “The Death of the Singer: Authorship and female voices in electronic music.” eContact! 1/3 — Voix et textes en électroacoustique / Voice and Text in Electroacoustics (1998). https://econtact.ca/1_3/Bosma.html

_____. “Bodies of Evidence, Singing Cyborgs and Other Gender Issues in Electrovocal Music.” Organised Sound 8/1 (April 2003) “Gender in Music Technology,” pp. 5–17. http://doi.org/10.1017/S135577180300102X

_____. “Musical Washing Machines, Composer-Performers and Other Blurring Boundaries: How women make a difference in electroacoustic music.” Intersections: Canadian Journal of Music 26/2 (January 2006) “In and Out of the Sound Studio,” pp. 97–117. http://doi.org/10.7202/1013229ar

_____. “The Electronic Cry: Voice and gender in electroacoustic music.” Unpublished doctoral dissertation, University of Amsterdam, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/11245/1.400268

_____. “Unsettling Performances, Soundwalks and Loudspeakers: Gender in electroacoustic music and other sounding arts.” In The Routledge Companion to Sounding Art. Edited by Marcel Cobussen, Vincent Meelberg and Barry Truax. New York and London: Routledge, 2016, pp. 305–319. http://doi.org/10.4324/9781315770567.ch24

Braidotti, Rosi. Nomadic Subjects: Embodiment and sexual difference in contemporary feminist theory. New York: Columbia University Press, 1994.

_____. “Comment on Felski’s ‘The Doxa of Difference’: Working through sexual difference.” Signs 23/1 (Autumn 1997), pp. 23–40. http://doi.org/10.1086/495232

Buikema, Rosemary and Anneke Smelik (Eds.). Vrouwenstudies in de cultuurwetenschappen. 1st edition. Muiderberg: Coutinho, 1993. Also 2nd edition and translation published as Women’s Studies and Culture: A Feminist introduction to the humanities. London: Zedbooks, 1995.

Dame, Joke. “Rocky Times: Feminist musicology in the 1990s.” Muziek en Wetenschap 2/1 (1992), pp. 25–31.

_____. “Thema en Variaties: Feministische Muziekwetenschap.” In Vrouwenstudies in de cultuurwetenschappen. 1st edition. Edited by Rosemary Buikema and Anneke Smelik. Muiderberg: Coutinho, 1993, pp. 141–153.

_____. Het zingend lichaam: Betekenissen van de stem in westerse vocale muziek. Kampen: Kok Agora, 1994.

McCartney, Andra. “A Prelude to EA Gender Issues.” Contact! 8/2 (Spring 1995), pp. 68–74.

_____. “Whose Playground, Which Games and What Rules? Women composers in the digital playground.” ICMC 1995. Proceedings of the 21st International Computer Music Conference (Banff AB, Canada: Banff Centre for the Arts, 3–7 September 1995), pp. 553–560. http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.bbp2372.1995.159

_____. “The Ambiguous Relation: Fourteen Canadian women in the electroacoustic studio, Part 1 — Composers from Toronto and Vancouver.” Contact! 9/1 (Autumn 1995), pp. 43–57.

_____. “The Ambiguous Relation: Fourteen Canadian women in the electroacoustic studio, Part 2 — Composers from Montréal and Waterloo.” Contact! 9/2 (Spring 1996), pp. 29–47.

_____. “Creating Worlds for my Music to Exist: How women composers of electroacoustic music make place for their voices.” Unpublished master’s thesis, York University (Toronto), 1997.

_____. “Where Water Meets…” eContact! 1.1 — Femmes en électroacoustique 1 / Women in Electroacoustics 1 (March 1998, March 2022). https://econtact.ca/1_1/mccartney_water.html

_____. “Cyborg Experiences: Contradictions and tensions of technology, nature, and the body in Hildegard Westerkamp’s ‘Breathing Room’.” In Music and Gender. Edited by P. Moisala and B. Diamond. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2000, pp. 317–335. http://www.academia.edu/5701121

_____. “Sounding Places with Hildegard Westerkamp.” Unpublished doctoral dissertation. Toronto: York University, 2000. Available at http://hildegardwesterkamp.ca/resources/PDFs/writings-pdf/Andradiss.pdf

_____. “Gender, Genre and Electroacoustic Soundmaking Practices.” Intersections: Canadian Journal of Music 26/2 (January 2006) “In and Out of the Sound Studio,” pp. 20–48. http://doi.org/10.7202/1013224ar

McCartney, Andra and Ellen Waterman. “Editorial.” Intersections: Canadian Journal of Music 26/2 (January 2006) “In and Out of the Sound Studio,” pp. 3–19.

Trudel, Pascale. “A Studio of One’s Own.” eContact! 1.1 — Femmes en électroacoustique 1 / Women in Electroacoustics 1 (March 1998, March 2022). https://econtact.ca/1_1/trudel_studio.html

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