Description

Book Synopsis
In focusing on the practices, politics and ethics of listening, this wide-ranging book offers an important new perspective on questions of media audiences, publics and citizenship.

Trade Review

"This book belongs on the small shelf we reserve for those especially evocative studies that can transform our understandings of what seem like familiar processes."
Gary Woodward, Journal of Mass Communication and Society

"Lacey has created a foundation from which scholars of communication (be it mediated, political, or rhetorical) can proceed to take listening seriously [and] opened an important clearing into new questions and ideas about mediated communication."
Lisbeth Lipari, Political Communication

"The book is particularly welcome in helping to erode the relentless presentism of 'new' media studies, and to open up the necessary historical dimension we need in order to counteract it. Lacey does more than open up this dimension. Her book extends and enriches our understanding of what it involves."
Michael Pickering, European Journal of Communication

"Lacey provides a deep historical, theoretical and material understanding of listening [...]. The book deserves a broad readership for the accessible manner in which it handles a range of sophisticated ideas. It is a historical survey of listening in the age of mass media, and a philosophical reflection on the nature of our relationship with sound, its mediation and theorization and indeed the political nature of this dynamic."
Paul Long, Discourse and Society

"Listening Publics...raises many thought provoking questions, and presents ideas and theories that the communication field might do well to study more."
Peter Kreten, Journal of Broadcast and Electronic Media

"A collection of thoughtful, interesting and finely nuanced analyses of listening practices in the media age."
H-Soz-u-Kult

"Kate Lacey's timely and thoughtful history of listening, a topic so long submerged within accounts of modern broadcasting, offers a welcome challenge to existing theories of the public sphere. Her account of our practices of listening *out* is an important new reference-point for an age of heightened sensory complexity."
Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths, University of London

"Kate Lacey is a leading historian of radio who has now turned her attention to listening. A long-neglected aspect of the experience of broadcasting is brought to life in this engaging, thoughtful study of listening as a communicative right and responsibility. An invaluable addition to our understanding of how broadcasting works for its audiences."
Paddy Scannell, University of Michigan

"At once subtle and stunning, Kate Lacey's exploration of the history and concept of listening as a distinct cultural practice adds immeasurably to both the field of sound studies and our understanding of the role played by mediated communication in modern history. This careful delineation of aural practices shows how central the act of listening has been in the formation of social structures and ways of understanding the world around us."
Michele Hilmes, University of Wisconsin-Madison

"A sparkling synthesis of broadcast history and social theory that is full of original insights and nuggets from primary research, Listening Publics unfolds the neglected politics and ethics of the ear. A marvelously sane plea for listening as a key mode of participation in the public sphere."
John D. Peters, University of Iowa



Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Preface

Listening overlooked
Chapter 1 Listening in and listening out
Chapter 2 The modernisation of listening

Listening in the age of spectacle
Chapter 3 Listening in good faith: recording, representation and the real
Chapter 4 Listening amid the noise of modernity
Chapter 5 Listening live: the politics and experience of the radiogenic

Ways of listening
Chapter 6 The privatisation of the listening public
Chapter 7 The politics and practices of collective listening

Listening in the public sphere
Chapter 8 The public sphere as auditorium
Chapter 9 Media and the ethics of listening
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index

Listening Publics The Politics and Experience of

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    A Hardback by Kate Lacey

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      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Listening Publics The Politics and Experience of by Kate Lacey

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 12/04/2013
      ISBN13: 9780745660240, 978-0745660240
      ISBN10: 074566024X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In focusing on the practices, politics and ethics of listening, this wide-ranging book offers an important new perspective on questions of media audiences, publics and citizenship.

      Trade Review

      "This book belongs on the small shelf we reserve for those especially evocative studies that can transform our understandings of what seem like familiar processes."
      Gary Woodward, Journal of Mass Communication and Society

      "Lacey has created a foundation from which scholars of communication (be it mediated, political, or rhetorical) can proceed to take listening seriously [and] opened an important clearing into new questions and ideas about mediated communication."
      Lisbeth Lipari, Political Communication

      "The book is particularly welcome in helping to erode the relentless presentism of 'new' media studies, and to open up the necessary historical dimension we need in order to counteract it. Lacey does more than open up this dimension. Her book extends and enriches our understanding of what it involves."
      Michael Pickering, European Journal of Communication

      "Lacey provides a deep historical, theoretical and material understanding of listening [...]. The book deserves a broad readership for the accessible manner in which it handles a range of sophisticated ideas. It is a historical survey of listening in the age of mass media, and a philosophical reflection on the nature of our relationship with sound, its mediation and theorization and indeed the political nature of this dynamic."
      Paul Long, Discourse and Society

      "Listening Publics...raises many thought provoking questions, and presents ideas and theories that the communication field might do well to study more."
      Peter Kreten, Journal of Broadcast and Electronic Media

      "A collection of thoughtful, interesting and finely nuanced analyses of listening practices in the media age."
      H-Soz-u-Kult

      "Kate Lacey's timely and thoughtful history of listening, a topic so long submerged within accounts of modern broadcasting, offers a welcome challenge to existing theories of the public sphere. Her account of our practices of listening *out* is an important new reference-point for an age of heightened sensory complexity."
      Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths, University of London

      "Kate Lacey is a leading historian of radio who has now turned her attention to listening. A long-neglected aspect of the experience of broadcasting is brought to life in this engaging, thoughtful study of listening as a communicative right and responsibility. An invaluable addition to our understanding of how broadcasting works for its audiences."
      Paddy Scannell, University of Michigan

      "At once subtle and stunning, Kate Lacey's exploration of the history and concept of listening as a distinct cultural practice adds immeasurably to both the field of sound studies and our understanding of the role played by mediated communication in modern history. This careful delineation of aural practices shows how central the act of listening has been in the formation of social structures and ways of understanding the world around us."
      Michele Hilmes, University of Wisconsin-Madison

      "A sparkling synthesis of broadcast history and social theory that is full of original insights and nuggets from primary research, Listening Publics unfolds the neglected politics and ethics of the ear. A marvelously sane plea for listening as a key mode of participation in the public sphere."
      John D. Peters, University of Iowa



      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements
      Preface

      Listening overlooked
      Chapter 1 Listening in and listening out
      Chapter 2 The modernisation of listening

      Listening in the age of spectacle
      Chapter 3 Listening in good faith: recording, representation and the real
      Chapter 4 Listening amid the noise of modernity
      Chapter 5 Listening live: the politics and experience of the radiogenic

      Ways of listening
      Chapter 6 The privatisation of the listening public
      Chapter 7 The politics and practices of collective listening

      Listening in the public sphere
      Chapter 8 The public sphere as auditorium
      Chapter 9 Media and the ethics of listening
      Endnotes
      Bibliography
      Index

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