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The wireless past : Anglo-Irish writers and the BBC, 1931-1968 / Emily C. Bloom.
LIBRA PN1991.8.L5 B56 2016
Available from offsite location
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Bloom, Emily, author.
- Series:
- Oxford mid-century studies
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Radio and literature--Ireland--History.
- Radio and literature.
- History.
- Ireland.
- Physical Description:
- vii, 205 pages ; 23 cm.
- Edition:
- First edition.
- Place of Publication:
- Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2016.
- Summary:
- The Oxford Mid-Century Studies series publishes monographs in several disciplinary and creative areas in order to create a thick description of culture in the thirty-year period around the Second World War. With a focus on the 1930s through the 1960s, the series concentrates on fiction, poetry, film, photography, theatre, as well as art, architecture, design, and other media. The mid-century is an age of shifting groups and movements, from existentialism through abstract expressionism to confessional, serial, electronic, and pop art styles. The series charts such intellectual movements, even as it aids and abets the very best scholarly thinking about the power of art in a world under new techno-political compulsions, whether nuclear-apocalyptic, Cold War-propagandized, transnational, neo-imperial, super-powered, or postcolonial. The Wireless Past chronicles the emergence of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) as a significant promotional platform and aesthetic influence for Irish modernism from the 1930s to the 1960s. This is the first book-length study of Irish literary broadcasting on the BBC and situates the works of W. B. Yeats, Elizabeth Bowen, Louis MacNcicc, and Samuel Beckett in the context of the media environments that shaped their works. Drawing upon unpublished radio archives, this book shows that radio broadcasting, rather than prompting a break with literary history and traditional literary forms, in fact served as an important means for reinterpreting the legacies of oral and print traditions. In the years surrounding World War II, radio came to be seen as a catalyst for literary revivals and, simultaneously, a force for experimentation. This double valence of radio-conjoining revivalism and experimentation-creates mid-century modernism's radiogenic aesthetics. Book jacket.
- Contents:
- 1 W. B. Yeats's Radiogenic Poetry 27
- 2 Louis MacNeice in the Echo Chamber 64
- 3 Elizabeth Bowen's Spectral Radio 94
- 4 Samuel Beckett's Sound Archives 128.
- ISBN:
- 9780198749615
- 0198749619
- OCLC:
- 965729469
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