kuuluakuulla
Kuuluakuulla is a term used mainly in Finnish sound studies and ethnographic discourse to denote a particular stance in listening. It describes a reflexive, active mode of hearing in which the listener pays attention not only to what a sound is but to how the act of listening itself shapes perception. The term blends two Finnish roots: "kuulu" meaning "to be heard" and "kuulla" meaning "to listen."
Etymology and usage origin: The word is a neologism that emerged in the late 2010s among researchers
Definition and scope: Kuuluakuulla denotes a listening practice that foregrounds context, memory, and intention in auditory
Applications: In field recordings, kuuluakuulla guides how researchers annotate sounds by including listener responses and situational
Relation to related concepts: It intersects with soundscape studies, listening theory, and phenomenology and shares concerns
Reception and critique: Some scholars view the term as an informative shorthand for a reflexive listening stance;
See also: listening, soundscape, phenomenology, acoustic ecology. References: Notable uses appear in Finnish-language essays, blogs, and