“…In contrast to breath, the voice has been theorized in a variety of disciplines like acoustics, musicology, education, psychology, and of most interest here, philosophy (Dolar, 2006; Waldenfels, 1999), sociology and anthropology (Blackman, 2016; Crossley, 2015; Vallee, 2017), as well as ethnomusicology and sound studies (Brabec de Mori, 2013; Cummins, 2018; Eidsheim, 2015). Vallee asks us to visualize the voice as ‘an imagined organ’, assembled from its many foundational processes (muscular movements affecting the lung, larynx, tongue and lips, combined with thought and social implications).…”