Mobility Without Mayhem

Mobility Without Mayhem

Author: Jeremy Packer

Publisher: Duke University Press

Published: 2008-02-26

Total Pages: 364

ISBN-13: 9780822339632

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DIVA cultural studies account of automobiles and concerns about safety in the U.S. from the 1950s to the present./div


Radio, Race, and Audible Difference in Post-1945 America

Radio, Race, and Audible Difference in Post-1945 America

Author: Art M. Blake

Publisher: Springer Nature

Published: 2019-11-08

Total Pages: 104

ISBN-13: 3030318419

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In the second half of the twentieth century, new sounds began to reverberate across the United States. The voices of African-Americans as well as of women, Latinx, queer, and trans people broke through in social movements, street protests, and in media stories of political and social disruption. Postwar America literally sounded different. This book argues that new technologies and new mobilities sharpened American attention to these audibly coded identities, on the radio, on the streets and highways, in new music, and on television. Covering the Puerto Rican migration to New York in the 1950s, the varying uses of CB radio by white and African American citizens in the 1970s, and the emergence of audible queerness, Art M. Blake attunes us to the sounds of race, mobility, and audible difference. As he argues, marginalized groups disrupted the postwar machine age by using new media technologies to make themselves heard.


Sound in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction

Sound in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction

Author: David Suisman

Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press

Published: 2011-10-11

Total Pages: 319

ISBN-13: 081220686X

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During the twentieth century sound underwent a dramatic transformation as new technologies and social practices challenged conventional aural experience. As a result, sound functioned as a means to exert social, cultural, and political power in unprecedented and unexpected ways. The fleeting nature of sound has long made it a difficult topic for historical study, but innovative scholars have recently begun to analyze the sonic traces of the past using innovative approaches. Sound in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction investigates sound as part of the social construction of historical experience and as an element of the sensory relationship people have to the world, showing how hearing and listening can inform people's feelings, ideas, decisions, and actions. The essays in Sound in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction uncover the varying dimensions of sound in twentieth-century history. Together they connect a host of disparate concerns, from issues of gender and technology to contests over intellectual property and government regulation. Topics covered range from debates over listening practices and good citizenship in the 1930s, to Tokyo Rose and Axis radio propaganda during World War II, to CB-radio culture on the freeways of Los Angeles in the 1970s. These and other studies reveal the contingent nature of aural experience and demonstrate how a better grasp of the culture of sound can enhance our understanding of the past.