The Oxford Handbook of Radio and Podcasting provides a concise yet in-depth overview of the development of radio as a creative and cultural form, from early broadcasting to the digital present. Organized around major aspects of radio's social and political impact - on the arts, on news and documentary, on community, nation, identity, and culture - it draws on contributors from interdisciplinary backgrounds and many nationalities to explore the world of sound-based communication across a century of practice. Links are provided to illustrative sound clips in many chapters, along with chapter-by-chapter audiographies offering digital links to enable further listening.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Introduction to The Oxford Handbook of Radio and Podcasting - Michele Hilmes and Andrew J. Bottomley
- SECTION I: RADIO ARTS - MUSIC
- 1. Punch Cards and Playlists: Computation, Curation, and the Cybernetic Origins of Radio Formatting - Alexander Russo
- 2. Freeform Radio and the History of Music Streaming - Elena Razlogova
- 3. New Music Fridays: Now Available via Podcasts - Jeremy Wade Morris
- 4. "A Golden Age of Audio": Smart Speakers, Domestic Listening, and the Question of Radioness - Christina Baade
- 5. The Campus Radio Music Library in the Streaming Music Era - Brian Fautuex
- SECTION II: RADIO ARTS - DRAMA
- 6. British Radio Drama and Theatre - Hugh Chignell
- 7. Silly Women's Stories? The Foundational Role of the Daytime Radio Serial - Elana Levine
- 8. Korean Radio Drama: Mid-Century Melodramatic Voice Performance - Jina E. Kim
- 9. Sloppy Realism: Audio Drama, Field Recording, and the Radiophonic Unconscious - Neil Verma
- 10. Listen Without Limits: True Crime, Audio Drama, and BBC Sounds Podcasts - Leslie McMurtry
- SECTION III: RADIO ARTS - POETRY, POLITICS, AND POETICS
- 11. Through the Wild Dark: Loose Notes in Search of a Radio Poetics - Gregory Whitehead
- 12. Langston Hughes, The Man Who Went to War, and the Political Work of the Radio Ballad - Michele Hilmes
- 13. In the Air: Broadcasting the Poetry of the U.S. Women's Liberation Movement - Lisa Hollenbach
- 14. Noisy Feeds: Reciprocal Listening, Decolonial Struggle, and Play in Podcasting - Michelle Macklem
- SECTION IV: RADIO FACTUALITIES - DOCUMENTARY AND NONFICTION STORYTELLING
- 15. Back to Sound School: Revisiting the Aesthetic Norms of 1950s and 1960s Educational Radio - Matt St. John, Eric Hoyt, and Stephanie Sapienza
- 16. Sensational Voices: Discourses of Intimacy in Podcast Production Culture - Andrew J. Bottomley
- 17. The Invisible Art of Audio Storytelling - Siobhán McHugh
- 18. Giving Voice or Creating a Spectacle?: Personality, Intimacy, and Ehtics in First-Person Narrative Nonfiction Podcasting - Christopher Cwynar
- SECTION V: RADIO FACTUALITIES - NEWS AND TALK
- 19. Breakfast Radio: "We Wake Up Bright and Early Just to Howdy-Do Ya" - Amanda Keeler
- 20. The Strange Case of Topless Radio - Jacob Smith
- 21. Late-Night Talk Radio in Post-Mao China: From the Telecommunication Age to the Digital Age - Wei Lei
- 22. Podcast Journalism: Storytelling Experimentation and Emerging Conventions - Dylan Bird and Mia Lindgren
- 23. The Daily Dose: Podcasting and Broadcasting in the Public Interest - Jason Loviglio
- SECTION VI: RADIO AND COMMUNITY
- 24. Native American Radio History and the Indians for Indians Program - Lina Ortega and Josh Garrett-Davis
- 25. Finding Queer Soundwork: Information Activism in Lesbian Feminist Radio and Queer Podcast Networks - Stacey Copeland
- 26. Community Radio in Central and Eastern Europe: Poland Takes Two Steps Forward, One Step Back - Urszula Doliwa
- 27. Casting On Podcasts: Stitching Maker Identities into a Modern Sound Culture - Jennifer Hyland Wang
- SECTION VII: RADIO AND NATION
- 28. The BBC and the Rise and Fall of the Empire Radio Feature, 1932-1966 - Simon J. Potter
- 29. Kenyan Radio, Colonial Modernity, and Postcolonial Subjectivities - Dina Ligaga
- 30. Segregation on the Airwaves: From a Monolingual to a Multilingual Broadcasting Model in Angola and Mozambique - Nelson Ribeiro
- 31. Radio, Cinema, and the South Asian Soundscape: From Broadcasting to the Digital Era - Aswin Punathambekar
- 32. Educating the Public: U.S. Public Radio's Roots in Education and Research - Josh Shepperd
- SECTION VIII: RADIO CULTURE AND HISTORIOGRAPHY
- 33. Remediate, Listen, Repeat: Lives and Afterlives of Three Caribbean Archives - Alejandra Bronfman
- 34. Recuperating a Critical Tradition: John Crosby, Jack Gould, and the Development of American Newspaper Radio Criticism, 1946-1952 - Kathy Fuller-Seeley and Laura C. Brown
- 35. For the Love of Radio: The Archival Impulse in Broadcast Institutions - Carolyn Birdsall
- 36. Confronting the Inaudible Past: A Document-Based Approach to Audio Archaeology - Shawn VanCour
- 37. Communication in the Radio Century: Thinking Through Radio - Kate Lacey