A
recent conversation with a colleague who suggested that listening to a book
provided an inferior literary experience, has spurred Jennie to celebrate the
exciting, expanding, and enticing developments in the production and
publication of recorded books. Are you a print reader or an audio listener – or
a bit of both? Read on and embrace both sides of the fence!
Stories
have existed long before recorded history and the art of storytelling has
evolved to embrace multiple media and formats in print and pictorial forms.
However, the oral tradition continues to engage us (thank goodness!) and has
been enhanced with technological developments over the last century. From radio
broadcasting to serialised popular literature recorded books may have evolving formats
– vinyl, cassette, CD, MP3 and eAudio – but the underlying principal remains
the same – the joy of listening to a good story.
Jon Scieszka, prolific author and vocal supporter of kids
and reading, quite rightly argues that audiobooks add a fun dimension to reading.
Penguin Random House Audio (2015, March 16). Audiobooks equal seriously FUN reading [Video file]. Retrieved from https://youtu.be/VtHhltV2Ifg
Willingham does discuss the value of prosody –
the rhythm, stress, and intonation of speech – that may aid
comprehension. In today’s multimedia world audio storytelling takes this to new
levels with many examples of multiple voices, and varied accents to add richness,
variety and a sense of place. A striking example of the power of multiple voices
is evident in the production of the three titles in the Illuminae Files
written by Amie Kauffman and Jay Kristoff and performed by a host of performers
and an orchestra! Get the full story at Illuminae Series – Performance Masterpiece.
Accents
can add a richness and sense of place to a story. A recently read favourite of mine, accessed through
the Sync Audiobooks for Teens US summer reading program, is The Name of the Star – written by Maureen
Johnson and narrated by Nicola Barber. A Louisiana teenager is transplanted into
an exclusive boarding school in inner London where a series of “Jack the Ripper”
style murders take place. The southern US drawl is tempered with upperclass
English and Soho slang – an absolute listening delight. An adult perspective on
the joy of immersing yourself in the Scottish burr is explored by Ellen Quint
(2019) in AudioFile Magazine's article on the Tartan Noir.
And
of course, we can’t bypass the..... (drumroll.....) sound effects. The Illuminae Series
post (linked above) gives you insights into possibilities and these are so
diverse that they can’t be adequately covered here. However, this is big business and a
serious art form that warrants exploration. It has a name: foley (named after
sound-effects artist Jack Foley). Foley is the reproduction of everyday sounds
to add quality and presence to audio tracks including films, videos and, of
course, audiobooks. Watch (and listen to) Penguin Books production on the The
Making of the Roald Dahl Audio Books and discover more about this fascinating
aspect that adds a rich layer of meaning to the audio experience.
Penguin Books UK. (2013). The making of Roald Dahl audio books [Video file]. Retrieved from https://youtu.be/hIwtAuOpU_g
If you are still concerned about listening and literacy the Audio Publisher Association has drawn together some interesting research captured in this infographic.
©
Audio Publisher Assoc. (2019).
How audio promotes literacy
https://www.audiopub.org/uploads/pdf/sound-learning_infographic_2019.pdf
|
“We
will speak for the books."
...
"Like the Lorax?"
"The Lorax speaks for the trees," I remind her.
"Books are made out of paper. Paper is made out of trees."
"What about e-books?"
"We can speak for them too."
"Audiobooks?"
"Audiobooks speak for themselves." She grins. "Get it?”
References
Audio
Publisher Association. (2019). How audio promotes literacy [Infographic]. Retrieved
from https://www.audiopub.org/uploads/pdf/sound-learning_infographic_2019.pdf
Bales, J. (2019, September 27). Illuminae Series – Performance Masterpiece [Blog post]. Retrieved from https://jenniebales.wordpress.com/2019/09/27/illuminae-series-performance-masterpiece/
Deniz,
F. Nunez-Elizalde, A. Huth, A. g. & Gallant, J. (2019). The representation
of semantic information across human cerebral cortex during listening versus
reading is invariant to stimulus modality, 39(39), 7722-7736. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0675-19.2019
Knapton
(2019, August 19). End of audiobook snobbery as scientists find reading and
listening activates the same parts of the brain [Blog post]. Retrieved from https://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/2019/08/19/end-audiobook-snobbery-scientists-find-hearing-listening-activates/
Penguin Books UK. (2013, September 13). The making of Roald Dahl audio
books [Video file].
Retrieved from https://youtu.be/hIwtAuOpU_g
Penguin Random House Audio (2015, March 16). Audiobooks equal seriously FUN reading [Video file]. Retrieved from https://youtu.be/VtHhltV2Ifg
Quint, E. (2019, August 12). Tartan noir: Discover the rich offerings of the Scottish crime audiobooks [blog post]. Retrieved from https://www.audiofilemagazine.com/blog/tartan-noir-discovering-the-rich-offerings-of-scottish-crime-audiobooks/
Willingham, D. (2016). Is listening to an audio book cheating?. Retrieved from http://www.danielwillingham.com/daniel-willingham-science-and-education-blog/is-listening-to-an-audio-book-cheating
Jennie Bales
Avid book listener
CBCA Committee Member & Social Media Coordinator
Thanks so much for the update on the current technology and choices for readers. As technology evolves it is great to be aware of the changes and able to give sound advice to students, especially from an evidence based perspective. Thanks Jennie
ReplyDeleteHi Jennie, I noticed you included the APA infographic about audiobooks. Unfortunately the stats are misleading on that graphic. I can't find anything in the bibliography that indicates where they got it from. I've written about it in a recent blog post: https://audiobookresearch.wordpress.com/2019/10/15/misleading-infographic-about-audiobooks/
ReplyDeleteHi Sue and thank for identifying this. And also for your site details - a great source of information. https://audiobookresearch.wordpress.com/about/
DeleteJennie
Hi Jennie, You beat me to it! I was about to suggest a blog about audio books as I am a very, very keen listener. Have favourite series and favourite readers too! Thanks for the references, I'll certainly look up some of them. Kay
ReplyDelete