Radio Modernisms

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Aesthetics
Audience
BBC
BBC Feature
BBC Home Service
BBC Radio Drama
BBC Radio's imaginative programming
BBC Write Archive Centre
broadcast media studies
Broadcasting
Caribbean Voices
Carrion Crow
Category=JBCT
Clip
Culture
Dark Tower
Early BBC
Early Radio Drama
Edward Sackville West
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Features
History
intermediality research
Lance Sieveking
Literary Radio
Literature
Media
Media History
Mike Dibb
Milk Wood
Modernism
modernist radio feature programmes
political landscapes
Post-war
propaganda and media
Pure Radio
race and gender in broadcasting
Radio
Radio Ballads
Radio Drama
Radio Feature
Radio Modernisms
Radio Voice
sound art analysis
Squirrel's Cage
Squirrel’s Cage
transnationalism
twentieth-century British culture
Uncle Robin
Vernacular Modernism

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367367657
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Feb 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This collection interrogates and stimulates deep, cross-disciplinary engagement with the various understandings and interplays of ‘radio modernisms’ from the early decades of the twentieth century through to the 1950s.

Academics from a range of different disciplines explore their common interests in the richness and heterogeneity of BBC Radio’s imaginative programming – in terms of sound; as cultural events from specific moments in time; as team creations; as something experienced live in the domestic context; and as cultural works that, in many cases, attracted a certain canonical pedigree. Radio modernisms are, as these chapters demonstrate, a combination of the particular, the contingent, and the contextual. More than a decade after the publication of the first scholarly works to yoke together ‘modernism’ and ‘radio’, this collection emphasises the plurality of ‘modernisms’ as a defining aspect of contemporary BBC historiography. The authors bring multiple lenses to bear – including race, gender, and transnationalism – in order to (re)locate twentieth-century radio programming in broad, expansive contexts. They also underline the dynamic entanglements of radio – and radiogenic feature programmes, in particular – with other kinds of media and cultural forms and formats, reframing radio as a site of and vehicle for remediation and intermediality.

In examining the myriad ways in which radio gave shape to new modernities, and both evolved and constituted new forms of modernism, this collection offers fresh perspectives on the interconnected significance of ‘radio modernisms’ within the socio-cultural, literary, and political landscapes of twentieth-century Britain. This book was originally published as a special issue of Media History.

Aasiya Lodhi is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Media and Communication at the University of Westminster, UK. She was previously an arts and current affairs producer at BBC Radio 3, Radio 4, and BBC World Service. Amanda Wrigley is a Postdoctoral Researcher in the Department of Film, Theatre and Television at the University of Reading, UK. She is also a Visiting Fellow in the School of Arts and Cultures at the Open University, UK, and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.