RT Article T1 Listening criminologically: on the materiality and relationality of sound JF Criminological encounters VO 6 IS 1 SP 146 OP 156 A1 Young, Alison 1962- LA English YR 2023 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1898857539 AB Criminology has recently seen growing engagement with the sensory landscape as an interpretive terrain. Following the recent acoustic turn in legal studies and political theory, criminology has been grappling with some of the complexities of sound, often as part of a broader effort to analyse the sensory landscape as an interpretive terrain (McClanahan & South, 2020, 9). But as Lee notes in his ‘challenge to criminology’ (2022, p. 3), there is a need for criminologists to engage more deeply with sound, investigating what Russell and Carlton (2020) have termed ‘acoustemologies’ by which sound produces knowledge, affect, and experience. This article carries out an investigation into sound as a key aspect of criminology’s ‘sensorium’ (Herrity, Schmidt & Warr, 2021) in order to consider what is involved when we listen criminologically. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 154-155 K1 Criminology K1 Materiality K1 Relationality K1 sensory criminology K1 Sound DO 10.26395/CE.2023.1.11