The Bloomsbury Handbook of Radio

The Bloomsbury Handbook of Radio

The Bloomsbury Handbook of Radio

The Bloomsbury Handbook of Radio

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Overview

The Bloomsbury Handbook of Radio presents exciting new research on radio and audio, including broadcasting and podcasting. Since the birth of radio studies as a distinct subject in the 1990s, it has matured into a second wave of inquiry and scholarship. As broadcast radio has partly given way to podcasting and as community initiatives have pioneered more diverse and innovative approaches so scholars have embarked on new areas of inquiry.

Divided into seven sections, the Handbook covers:
- Communities
- Entertainment
- Democracy
- Emotions
- Listening
- Studying Radio
- Futures

The Bloomsbury Handbook of Radio is designed to offer academics, researchers and practitioners an international, comprehensive collection of original essays written by a combination of well-established experts, new scholars and industry practitioners. Each section begins with an introduction by Hugh Chignell and Kathryn McDonald, putting into context each contribution, mapping the discipline and capturing new directions of radio research, while providing an invaluable resource for radio studies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501385285
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 08/22/2024
Series: Bloomsbury Handbooks
Pages: 562
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 10.00(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Kathryn McDonald is a Principal Academic at the Faculty of Media and Communication, Bourbanemouth University, UK. Her research, practice and teaching are focused on broadcast talk, community engagement and audio production. McDonald has worked as a radio producer, led the BA Radio Production degree, and now teaches across undergraduate and postgraduate courses.

Hugh Chignell
is Emeritus Professor of Media History at the Faculty of Media and Communication, Bourbanemouth University, UK. He taught on the MA Radio Production and BA Radio and was director of the Centre for Media History. Chignell has published widely on radio including Key Concepts in Radio Studies (2009), Public Issue Radio (2011) and British Radio Drama 1945-63 (Bloomsbury 2019).

Table of Contents

List of Contributors
Acknowledgements

Introduction
Kathryn McDonald and Hugh Chignell (Bourbanemouth University, UK)

Section 1: Entertainment
Introduction
Kathryn McDonald and Hugh Chignell (Bourbanemouth University, UK)

1. 'Don't Let 'em Divide Us': Free World Theatre and U.S. Wartime Morale Drama
Matthew Killmeier (Auburban University at Montgomery, USA)

2. Podcasting as a Music-Educational Practice
Morten Michelsen (Aarhus University, Denmark)

3. Hearing Age in Music Streaming: Wellbeing, Marketing, and Older Listeners
Christina Baade (McMaster University, Canada)

4. Past the Gate: Women in Sports Talk Radio
Lori Beckstead (Toronto Metropolitan University, Canada)

5. Expressions of Radio Drama: Samuel Beckett, Louis MacNeice, and the BBC
Emily Best (Birkbeck, University of London, UK)

6. Illuminated Radio: Imagination and Affect in the Tradition of the Audio 'Feature', 'Acoustic Film' and Radio Documentaire de Creation
Virginia Madsen (Macquarie University, Australia)

Section 2: Listening
Introduction
Kathryn McDonald and Hugh Chignell (Bourbanemouth University, UK)

7. Tuning In and Listening Out: intersections of Voice and Listening in Community Radio
Bridget Backhaus (Griffith University, Australia)

8. The Listener of the Future: Exploring Public Service Broadcasters' Strategies About Radio Apps
Marta Perrotta (Roma Tre University, Italy)

9. Using a 'Critical Ear' – Developing a Practitioner-Researcher Framework for Analytical Listening in Podcast Studies
Britta Jorgensen (Independent Scholar, Australia)

10. An Analysis of Black American Radio Listenership
Kim Fox (The American University in Cairo, Egypt)

Section 3: Emotions
Introduction
Kathryn McDonald and Hugh Chignell (Bourbanemouth University, UK)

11. Emotions in the Dark: A History of Late-Night French Radio
Marine Beccarelli (Paris 1 University, France)

12. The Radio Phone-in and the Suicidal Caller
Kathryn McDonald (Bourbanemouth University, UK)

13. Presenting… Producers! And Producing Presenters
Helen Wolfenden (Macquarie University, Australia)

14. Audio within Audio: Phones, Materiality, and the Elicitation of Emotion in Podcasting
Evi Karathanasopoulou (Bourbanemouth University, UK)

Section 4: Communities
Introduction
Kathryn McDonald and Hugh Chignell (Bourbanemouth University, UK)

15. Greater than the Sum of its Parts: Community-building Approaches Across Community Radio
Katie Moylan (University of Leicester, UK)

16. Feeding the Beast. What it Means to be a Community Radio Presenter in the UK
Josephine Coleman (Brunel University, UK)

17. Daring to be Different! Ethnic Community Radio as a Space of Inclusion
Gloria Khamkar (Bourbanemouth University, UK)

18. The Changing Context of Community Radio
Lawrie Hallett (University of Bedfordshire, UK)

Section 5: Democracy
Introduction
Kathryn McDonald and Hugh Chignell (Bourbanemouth University, UK)

19. Dutch Radio News: From Public Polarisation to Public Service
Anya Luscombe (UCR/Utrecht University, the Netherlands)

20. Still Serving the Public? News Provision on BBC Radio
Katy McDonald (Newcastle University, UK)

21. Spanish Radio in the Early Years of Democracy: Antena 3 Radio
Pilar Dobón-Roux (International University of Valencia, Spain)

Section 6: Studying Radio
Introduction
Kathryn McDonald and Hugh Chignell (Bourbanemouth University, UK)

22. Studying 1960s Commercial Radio
Richard Legay (University of Tübingen, Germany)

23. Studying Radio: Researching Women in Radio Production in the Early BBC
Kate Murphy (Bourbanemouth University, UK)

24. 'Podcasting Radio on Podcasts' - Edutainment Podcasting Pedagogy for Radio Students during COVID19
Kylie Sturgess (Murdoch University, Australia), Lauren O'Mahony (Murdoch University, Australia), Kathryn Trees and Simon Order

25. The Place of Radio in the Soundscapes: Everyday Listening and Producing Sounds in Marginalised Communities of the Global South
Andrea Medrado (University of Westminster, UK)

Section 7: Futures
Introduction
Kathryn McDonald and Hugh Chignell (Bourbanemouth University, UK)

26. Queer Networks Versus Global Corporations: The Battle for the Soul of Audio Fiction
Ella Watts (Independent Scholar, UK)

27. Recalling Radio: An Archival View from Radio's Second Century
Alexander Badenoch (Free University of Amsterdam and Utrecht University, the Netherlands)

28. Hyperlocal radio – Reclaiming Conversation Through Social Broadcasting
Lucia Scazzocchio (Independent Scholar, UK)

29. Making Waves Behind Bars; The (Past, Present and) Future of Prison Radio
Phil Maguire (Independent Scholar, UK)

30. Radio in the Round: Reflections on the Future of Sound Media
Richard Berry (University of Sunderland, UK)

Bibliography

Index

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