New Books Network

Christina Schwenkel, "Sonic Socialism: Crisis and Care in Pandemic Hanoi" (U California Press, 2025)

Mar 31, 2026
Christina Schwenkel, a socio-cultural anthropologist at UC Riverside who studies urban Vietnam and sensory ethnography. She explores how pandemic-era soundcraft reshaped public health: loudspeakers, alerts, and songs as tools of care and control. Short, vivid stories look at quarantine listening, frontline sonic labor, and how music and messaging remade everyday urban life.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Pandemic Forced An Auditory Turn In Ethnography

  • Lockdowns shifted governance from the visual to the auditory, making sound the primary medium of reaching isolated people.
  • Schwenkel reframed her visual-based urban research into a sensory, sonic autoethnography during Hanoi's quieted streets.
INSIGHT

Sonic Socialism Frames Cooperation Through Sound

  • Sonic socialism links historic collectivist mobilization with contemporary auditory governance.
  • Schwenkel uses the term to show cooperation, not just coercion, drove responses through loudspeakers, messaging, and communal sound practices.
ANECDOTE

GenCov Handwash Song Became A Viral Tool

  • The government's catchy hand-washing video GenCov used musicians and choreography to make hygiene a participatory practice.
  • That earworm circulated globally and was repurposed by citizens, showing state messages become locally remixed.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app