AUTOGRAPHED 1ST EDITION Listening In: Radio and the American Imagination
AUTOGRAPHED 1ST EDITION
Listening In: Radio and the American Imagination, from Amos 'n' Andy and Edward R. Murrow to W olfman Jack and Howard Stern
Description
From Publishers Weekly Tracing radio's development from the early days of
wireless to the shock jocks and NPR commentators of the '90s, Douglas (Where
the Girls Are) delivers a carefully researched and well-documented look at the
medium and the people who listened. Although Douglas's prose can be sluggish,
occasionally mired in statistics, her subject matter is always engaging. She
finds that each new technological innovation in radio was pioneered by
amateurs, resisted by the mainstream media, made popular by a daring few and
finally watered down and exploited by commercial interests. Douglas's main
interest is not in the innovations themselves, however, but in how they
affected the Americans who were listening to shows from Victor Lopez's jazz
band broadcasts in the '20s to Eddie Cantor's Chase and Sanborn Hour in the
'30s; Alan Reed's mixed-race rock 'n' roll broadcasts in the '50s; "White
Rabbit" on KSAN in San Francisco in the late '60s; Larry King in the '80s; and
Dr. Laura and Rush Limbaugh in the '90s. She shows us how radio has opened up
new worlds, and how its persistent presence (in the kitchen, in the car, at
work) continues to influence the nation despite being taken for granted.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. Read more From Library Journal
It's not just video that killed the radio star but images in general (e.g.,
TV, the Internet), says Douglas (media and American studies, Univ. of
Michigan, Ann Arbor). Douglas argues that through radio Americans can still
revive their imaginations. Her thesis will seem obvious to older
generationsAthat listening to the radio shaped the American psyche socially,
politically, and economicallyAbut the generations raised on MTV, CNN, ESPN,
and personal computers must still be convinced. It may be difficult to draw
their attention to a book with only eight photos, but Douglas re-creates the
wonder of having an invisible friend (or enemy) in forgotten and fading stars
like Jack Benny, Edward R. Murrow, Harry Caray, and Alan Freed. Unfortunately,
today radio belongs to overstuffed "suits," overplayed singles, and pinched
formats, which can musically and geographically "resegregate" people. Douglas
points out that listeners are partly to blame for radio's dismal state. Owners
are simply trying to air what their audiences want, but listeners are sending
mixed messages: they want variety but lack the imagination to accept it on one
station. A persuasive study of the power that radio has had and can still
have; essential for all communications collections.AHeather McCormack,
"Library Journal"Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. Read more See
all Editorial Reviews
Features:
Product Details:
Hardcover: 415 pages
Publisher: Time Books; 1 edition (April 20, 1999)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0812925467
ISBN-13: 63
Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 1.5 x 6.8 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds
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