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

£49.99

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

The Citizens Band

Cultural studies History of the Americas History of engineering and technology

Author: Art M. Blake

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Language: English

Published by: Palgrave Pivot

Published on: 8th November 2019

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 304 Kb

ISBN: 9783030318413


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.

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