Emily Thompson is an interdisciplinary scholar whose
work focuses on the often-overlooked subject of sound and fills an important
gap in contemporary American history, reaching into domains as diverse as urban
design and cinema studies. In her book, The Soundscape of Modernity,
she integrates the histories of the United States, technology, science, sound
production, and acoustics to examine the transformation of the American
soundscape from the turn of the century to the opening of Radio City Music Hall
in 1933. Thompson organizes her work around developments in twentieth-century
architecture, such as new concert halls and new building materials, and
explores innovations in the science of acoustics, the emergence of excessive
noise, and the efforts of scientists and designers to create new spaces and a
new, “modern” sound. Her interests center around changes in acoustic design as
reflections of larger cultural and social shifts in American life in the early
1900’s; she documents the interplay between differences in acoustic
characteristics of buildings constructed during this period and increases in
the value placed at the time on technological mastery, efficiency and control
in modern life. Thompson’s most recent project, on the role of engineers,
projectionists, and other industry technicians in the transition to
synchronized sound in cinema, promises to provide a similarly penetrating
analysis of another important moment in the history of sound and technology.
By charting the transformation of the elusive and ephemeral phenomenon of
sound, Thompson has recovered an important history of our time.
Emily Thompson received a B.S. (1984) from the Rochester
Institute of Technology and a Ph.D. (1992) from Princeton University. She has
held teaching positions at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (1992-93), Iowa
State University (1994-95), and the University of Pennsylvania (1995-2002).
Thompson was also a visiting scholar (2003-04) in the Program in Science,
Technology and Society and a senior fellow (2002-03) at the Dibner Institute
for History of Science and Technology, both at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. She became an associate professor in the Department of History at
the University of California, San Diego, in 2005.