Heather Smith

Heather Smith

First Name: 
Heather
Last Name: 
Smith
Title: 
PhD Program (She/Her)
Biography : 

Heather is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of History. Her work focuses on the potential for digital humanities methods, such as digital mapping, audio recording, and 3D modelling, to animate the sounds of the street in early modern Italy. She applies these methods to investigate how sound interacted with neighbourhoods in the city, and its role in daily life.

Education: 
MA, University of Toronto
Bmus, Wilfrid Laurier University
BA, Wilfrid Laurier University
Personal Website: 
https://trionfiproject.com/

People Type:

Areas of Interest: 

Early modern festivals (Tuscany), music, digital humanities, sound studies, sensory and spatial history

Program:

Cohort:

1st Major: 
Early Modern Europe
1st Minor: 
Medieval Studies
2nd Minor: 
Canadian History
Dissertation Title: 
Song, Spectacle, and Space in Ducal Tuscany (1539-1737)
Dissertation Supervisors: 
Nicholas Terpstra
Dissertation Description: 

This born-digital dissertation focuses on festivals in ducal Tuscany under the Medici (1539-1737). I examine how the ducal family used music, symbolic imagery, and ephemeral architecture in triumphal entries, baptisms, marriages, and funerals as part of a suite of sensory mechanisms of control to construct a state apparatus throughout Tuscany.
Tracking performances and correlating them with demographic data and ritual sites can demonstrate how power played out across sound and space, while street songs reveal popular responses. Through this multi-modal dissertation, my project seeks to bring the soundscape of the early modern festival to life by combining a socio-historical approach with digital humanities tools, such as 3D modelling, animated mapping, and audio recording, to better understand the multi-faceted impact of early modern street music on urban populations.
By Combining research data and digital humanities tools, I will assess the intersections of space, sound, and ritual at critical ritual and dynastic moments. Through this analysis, I seek to illuminate how music and sound may have communicated dominance, reinforced marginality, or negotiated power.

Meta Description: 
<p>Learn more about Heather Smith, a graduate student in the Department of History at the University of Toronto.</p>