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Ways of the Hand: The Organization of Improvised Conduct PDF

171 Pages·1978·9.517 MB·English
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Ways of the Hand Ways of the Hand The Organization of Improvised Conduct David Sudnow Harvard University Press Cambridge, Massachusetts 1978 Copyright © 1978 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Sudnow, David. Ways of the hand. Bibliography: p. 1. Improvisation (Music) 2. Hand. 3. Jazz music- instruction and study. 4. Phenomenology. I. Title. ML3822.S92 786.4'6 77-24057 ISBN 0-674-94833-5 For Harvey Sacks (1935-1975) Acknowledgments I would like to especially thank David Belknap, Michael Butler, Emanuel Schegloff, and James Schenkein for the hours of talk we had together. Each in his own way contributed to the develop­ ment of my thoughts about music making, and each put up with my many false starts with much- needed encouragement. James March and Michael Cole were partic­ ularly instrumental in my research, for they were central in establishing a most extraordinary setting for interdisciplinary work: the School of Social Sci­ ences at the University of California, Irvine. Here an anthropologist could teach a course by having Mexican craftsmen build a boat with the students; a mathematician could explore learning by estab­ lishing a school on a farm near the campus; a sociologist could conduct a course whose exclusive focus would be on the opening several seconds of a single conversation; and when they asked me what I could use in my laboratory when a new building was planned, I said that a piano would be nice, and they got me one, to aid my teaching and research in sociology. Without Irvine in the late 1960s, my work would have been impossible. University life everywhere would profit if there were more people like March and Cole. I owe to Dick Powell, a superb pianist, friend, and critic, the wonderful joys of being able to make music. Three people participated in my intellectual life with an order of influence to which I hope this study in some measure does justice. Harold Gar- viii | finkel provided the impetus for this investigation, in his writings, lectures, and the conversations we had over the years. He pushed me at every point to go for the detailed looks of things; even the most passing comments he made on many occasions re­ vealed an expanding richness of implication as I wrote; his encouragement enabled me to realize the consequences of allowing the keyboard, and not an academic discipline, to tell me where to go. If my study helps to realize the vision of a rigorous ethnomethodology, I would be most pleased. Harvey Sacks, whose work is well known, was a model for what close thinking, a love of detail, and a commitment to caretaking could be all about as a style of living and working. He was my mentor and friend for fifteen years, and like all those who were so very fortunate to have known him, life will simply never again have the fullness that Harvey made possible. His loss drains me each day. Robert Epstein, first as an undergraduate stu­ dent of mine and then as a friend and colleague, discussed every aspect of this study with me in detail, read and reread every page, made sugges­ tions of fine intricacy at each turn, and taught me a great deal about writing. I hope I can one day repay the debt I owe him when it comes time for him to do that masterful work we can surely expect in the future from an extraordinary thinker. Joyce Backman, of the Harvard University Press, worked terribly hard to see this book through the various stages necessary to reach publication. Her encouragement, editorial help, and support are deeply appreciated. My children Jessica and Paul, my parents Estelle and Irving—they suffered with me, because of me, and brought special pleasures that sustained me through years of hacking away at the piano and typewriter. I hope I have brought some music into their lives in return. And Patricia now brings new meaning to whatever will become of the effort. The hand reaches and extends, receives and welcomes—and not just things: the hand extends itself, and receives its own welcome in the hands of others. The hand holds. The hand carries. The hand designs and signs, presumably because man is a sign . . . the hand's gestures run everywhere through language, in their most perfect purity pre­ cisely when man speaks by being silent. And only when man speaks, does he think—not the other way around, as metaphysics still believes. Every motion of the hand in every one of its works carries itself through the element of thinking, every bear­ ing of the hand bears itself in that element. Martin Heidegger Preface From an upright posture I have looked down at my hands on the piano keyboard for some years as I studied jazz music, and when I regard my hands now, my looking is deeply informed by the history of looking I have done. If I watch my hands on a typewriter, I don't recognize their movements. I am startled by the looks of my hands while typing, just as I'm sur­ prised by the sight of my profile when surrounded by mirrors in a clothing store. It's like witnessing an interior part of my body going through some busi­ ness. But the sight of my piano-playing hands is familiar. I know their looks, not only in those inti­ mate ways in which we all know our hands' looks, but as my jazz-making hands. It is the ways of the hand that I watch now. For a long time in learning to play jazz piano, I was busy watching my hands and the terrain of the keyboard to see that they did not get into trouble; or I was looking at the keyboard in order to find places to take my fingers, so that instructional work was occurring as a form of guidance in which my looking was very much implicated. Then my look became preoccupied in more subtle ways, party to a kind of imaginary conceiving of various aspects of the territory in which I was moving. Even when looking away from the keyboard, I would conceive visual 'gestalts' of pathways for use as I was playing. Many jazz stu­ dents spend a good deal of time approaching the task of improvisation by formulating and using

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