Description

Book Synopsis
Immaterial Culture engages with texts that are now largely unread and dismissed as trivial or dubious: the vast body of plays – thrillers, narrative poetry, comedy sketches, documentaries and adaptations of literature and drama – that aired on American network radio during the medium’s so-called golden age.
For a quarter century, from the stock market crash of 1929 to the introduction of the TV dinner in 1954, radio plays enjoyed an exposure unrivalled by stage, film, television and print media. As well as entertaining audiences numbering in the tens of millions for a single broadcast, these scripted performances – many of which were penned by noted novelists, poets and dramatists – played important and often conflicting roles in advertising, government propaganda and education.
Reading these fugitive and often self-conscious texts in the context in which they were created and presented, the author considers what their neglect might tell us about ourselves, our visual bias and our attitudes toward commercial art and propaganda. The study’s ample scope, its interdisciplinary approach and its insistence on the primacy of the texts under discussion serve to regenerate the discourse about cultural products that challenge the way we classify art and marginalise the unclassifiable.

Table of Contents
Contents: Critical reception of American radio culture (1929-1954), then and now – Radio plays in relation to the theatrical stage, print media and education – Verse plays by noted American poets in response to isolationism and fascism – Propagandist/patriotic radio plays by established novelists and aspiring playwrights (1940-1945) – Radio thrillers, mysteries and whodunits in the service of wartime propaganda – Use of dialogue and monologue to explore interiority in radio melodrama – Language of poetry and journalism in the radio plays of Norman Corwin – Reputation of radio culture.

Immaterial Culture: Literature, Drama and the

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    A Paperback / softback by Harry Heuser

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 11/09/2013
      ISBN13: 9783034309776, 978-3034309776
      ISBN10: 3034309775

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Immaterial Culture engages with texts that are now largely unread and dismissed as trivial or dubious: the vast body of plays – thrillers, narrative poetry, comedy sketches, documentaries and adaptations of literature and drama – that aired on American network radio during the medium’s so-called golden age.
      For a quarter century, from the stock market crash of 1929 to the introduction of the TV dinner in 1954, radio plays enjoyed an exposure unrivalled by stage, film, television and print media. As well as entertaining audiences numbering in the tens of millions for a single broadcast, these scripted performances – many of which were penned by noted novelists, poets and dramatists – played important and often conflicting roles in advertising, government propaganda and education.
      Reading these fugitive and often self-conscious texts in the context in which they were created and presented, the author considers what their neglect might tell us about ourselves, our visual bias and our attitudes toward commercial art and propaganda. The study’s ample scope, its interdisciplinary approach and its insistence on the primacy of the texts under discussion serve to regenerate the discourse about cultural products that challenge the way we classify art and marginalise the unclassifiable.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Critical reception of American radio culture (1929-1954), then and now – Radio plays in relation to the theatrical stage, print media and education – Verse plays by noted American poets in response to isolationism and fascism – Propagandist/patriotic radio plays by established novelists and aspiring playwrights (1940-1945) – Radio thrillers, mysteries and whodunits in the service of wartime propaganda – Use of dialogue and monologue to explore interiority in radio melodrama – Language of poetry and journalism in the radio plays of Norman Corwin – Reputation of radio culture.

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