Emergency Broadcasting & 1930'S Am Radio
"Miller adds a theoretical context with which to assess these programs, and he effectively ties his findings to radio (and Internet) content available today. His approach is surely timely for he is really exploring how radio dealt (and deals) with real or imagined threats to national security."—The Journalism and Mass Communication Educator
The voice we hear on the radio the voice with no body attached is a key element in the history of media in the twentieth century. Before television and the internet, there was radio; and much of what defined the makeup of these newer media was influenced by the way radio was broadcast to people and the way people listened to it. Les mer
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Theoretically sophisticated, yet grounded in historical detail, "Emergency Broadcasting" offers a unique examination of radio and at the same time develops a complex understanding of the media whose birth is owed to the innovations and disembodied power established by it. Author note: Edward D. Miller is Chair of the Department of Media Culture at The College of Staten Island/CUNY.
Detaljer
- Forlag
- Temple University Press,U.S.
- Innbinding
- Innbundet
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Sider
- 256
- ISBN
- 9781566399920
- Utgivelsesår
- 2001
- Format
- 21 x 14 cm
Anmeldelser
"Miller adds a theoretical context with which to assess these programs, and he effectively ties his findings to radio (and Internet) content available today. His approach is surely timely for he is really exploring how radio dealt (and deals) with real or imagined threats to national security."—The Journalism and Mass Communication Educator
"In an era dominated by television and increasingly focused on the Internet as the new kid on the media block, Miller offers a valuable history lesson by reminding us of the power once yielded by radio. The best inoculation against the hyperbolic claims of new media is to understand the commonalities as well as the unique features of the various media that have shaped public consciousness in the past century. In this still unfolding narrative, radio has often been overlooked or taken for granted. Miller helps us avoid these mistakes and should encourage us all to take another, closer listen to the voices in the ether."—Larry Gross, Sol Worth Professor, The Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania
"Miller's book is a wholly original contribution to the study of both early American and contemporary radio. Perhaps his greatest strength is his ability to integrate theory with historical evidence. Miller's reading of both the "War of the Worlds" and FDR's Fireside Chats as being inflected by the radio reporting of the Hindenberg disaster is as unique as it is valuable. Emergency Broadcasting belongs alongside other significant radio books such as Noise Water Meat and Wireless Imagination."—Martin Spinelli, Ph.D., Professor of Radio and Media Studies, Brooklyn College of the City University of New York