Results 1 to 28 of 28

Thread: Vocal Fry

Threaded View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #20
    Join Date
    Nov 2011
    Location
    Highland Park, IL
    Posts
    14,384
    Mentioned
    994 Post(s)
    Here is another article:

    What is 'Vocal Fry' and why doesn't anyone care when men talk like that?

    "This American Life" host Ira Glass recently admitted that he uses vocal fry. But in a conversation with Chana Jaffe-Walt (who is not a dude), Glass also admitted that no one notices his vocal fry. And it's not that no one notices — women are criticized for using vocal fry while men have been getting away with it for years.

    "I get criticized for a lot of things in the emails to the show," Glass said. "No one has ever pointed this out."

    Noted academic and anarcho-syndicalist advocate Noam Chomsky has also been known to employ vocal fry (presumably as a means of dismantling capitalism). Chomsky certainly has his detractors, but none of them seem to take issue with his vocal quality either. And even The Hairpin noted last week that male vocal fry has become "a thing."

    In reality, associating the vocal fry trend only with women — both in practice and in naming — is a really just another way of trying to define gender roles.
    It's certainly interesting to observe the trends in human social interactions in the same way we observe a pack of wild capuchin monkeys. But the way that vocal fry gained traction in popular culture was, well, kind of weird.

    After that Science magazine article came out, women were suddenly being judged for the supposedly abrasive way in which they spoke when they used vocal fry, even though both women and men had probably been talking that way since well before 2011.

    There are many legitimate reasons — beyond gender — for why a person might develop vocal fry.
    The simple truth is that vocal fry is just one way that people talk, regardless of their gender. Some people employ it as a means of being heard, as differentiating their voices from the rest of the masses. Other people really do just talk that way!

    And it's another example of the way we treat women like Goldilocks ("This one's too sexy, and this one's too prude, and..."). If a woman uses a higher register to speak, then it's classified as ditzy, valley-girl uptalk. If a woman uses her lower register, it's vocal fry. If she speaks in the middle (modal range), her words often get lost entirely.

    So maybe instead of listening to the sound of someone's voice, we should listen to the actual words they're saying.
    Last edited by allegro; 03-30-2018 at 04:13 PM.

Posting Permissions