BBC features, radio voices and the propaganda of war, 1939-1941

BBC Radio drama, and especially feature programmes, became a crucial vehicle at the beginning of the Second World War for articulating a sense of national unity and for providing accounts of the war that could counteract Nazi propaganda. This essay will explore the feature series Shadow of the Swast...

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Main Author: Goody, Alex
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/items/d9389533-bf15-4efc-b59f-74463594c263/1/
https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/file/d9389533-bf15-4efc-b59f-74463594c263/1/BBC features and propaganda of war - 2018 - Goody.pdf
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spelling ftoxfordbrookes:tle:d9389533-bf15-4efc-b59f-74463594c263:afee126f-04b2-41a9-a6dd-b29b7c6c20ab:1 2023-05-15T17:14:09+02:00 BBC features, radio voices and the propaganda of war, 1939-1941 Goody, Alex 2018 application/pdf https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/items/d9389533-bf15-4efc-b59f-74463594c263/1/ https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/file/d9389533-bf15-4efc-b59f-74463594c263/1/BBC features and propaganda of war - 2018 - Goody.pdf en eng https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/items/d9389533-bf15-4efc-b59f-74463594c263/1/ https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/file/d9389533-bf15-4efc-b59f-74463594c263/1/BBC features and propaganda of war - 2018 - Goody.pdf All rights reserved BBC features, radio voices and the propaganda of war, 1939-1941 journal article 2018 ftoxfordbrookes 2023-02-23T23:07:02Z BBC Radio drama, and especially feature programmes, became a crucial vehicle at the beginning of the Second World War for articulating a sense of national unity and for providing accounts of the war that could counteract Nazi propaganda. This essay will explore the feature series Shadow of the Swastika (1939–40), Terence Horseley’s Narvik (1940) and Cecil McGivern’s The Battle of Britain (1941), examining how the aesthetics of this radiogenic genre developed through encounters with the propaganda politics of the British nation at the outbreak of war and in response to the reactions of radio listeners. For the writers of Shadow of the Swastika, the ‘sound alone’ of radio was crucial for creating an effective actuality in a feature, but the empathetic force of this sound actuality—its ability to stand as/for the real—raised important political and moral questions at a time of national crisis. Examining the broadcasts themselves, and drawing on audience responses to features, the essay will uncover the tensions between political and aesthetic conceptions of the radio feature between 1939 and 1941. As the essay will argue it was in this period, which spans the Phoney War and the first major British military campaigns, that friction arose between anxieties about the presence of the radio voice and its reception by listeners, and the BBC’s attempt to use the power of the radio medium to present a real account of the war. Political expediency, technology, radio aesthetics, the exigencies of war and the affectivity of sound were all negotiated through radio features as the Second World War escalated. By 1941, in response to these competing factors, the key parameters of BBC war features had solidified and they would go on to function, in the subsequent years of the war, as white propaganda binding the nation together in the struggle against Nazi Germany. Article in Journal/Newspaper Narvik Narvik Oxford Brookes University: RADAR (Research Archive) Narvik ENVELOPE(17.427,17.427,68.438,68.438)
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collection Oxford Brookes University: RADAR (Research Archive)
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description BBC Radio drama, and especially feature programmes, became a crucial vehicle at the beginning of the Second World War for articulating a sense of national unity and for providing accounts of the war that could counteract Nazi propaganda. This essay will explore the feature series Shadow of the Swastika (1939–40), Terence Horseley’s Narvik (1940) and Cecil McGivern’s The Battle of Britain (1941), examining how the aesthetics of this radiogenic genre developed through encounters with the propaganda politics of the British nation at the outbreak of war and in response to the reactions of radio listeners. For the writers of Shadow of the Swastika, the ‘sound alone’ of radio was crucial for creating an effective actuality in a feature, but the empathetic force of this sound actuality—its ability to stand as/for the real—raised important political and moral questions at a time of national crisis. Examining the broadcasts themselves, and drawing on audience responses to features, the essay will uncover the tensions between political and aesthetic conceptions of the radio feature between 1939 and 1941. As the essay will argue it was in this period, which spans the Phoney War and the first major British military campaigns, that friction arose between anxieties about the presence of the radio voice and its reception by listeners, and the BBC’s attempt to use the power of the radio medium to present a real account of the war. Political expediency, technology, radio aesthetics, the exigencies of war and the affectivity of sound were all negotiated through radio features as the Second World War escalated. By 1941, in response to these competing factors, the key parameters of BBC war features had solidified and they would go on to function, in the subsequent years of the war, as white propaganda binding the nation together in the struggle against Nazi Germany.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Goody, Alex
spellingShingle Goody, Alex
BBC features, radio voices and the propaganda of war, 1939-1941
author_facet Goody, Alex
author_sort Goody, Alex
title BBC features, radio voices and the propaganda of war, 1939-1941
title_short BBC features, radio voices and the propaganda of war, 1939-1941
title_full BBC features, radio voices and the propaganda of war, 1939-1941
title_fullStr BBC features, radio voices and the propaganda of war, 1939-1941
title_full_unstemmed BBC features, radio voices and the propaganda of war, 1939-1941
title_sort bbc features, radio voices and the propaganda of war, 1939-1941
publishDate 2018
url https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/items/d9389533-bf15-4efc-b59f-74463594c263/1/
https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/file/d9389533-bf15-4efc-b59f-74463594c263/1/BBC features and propaganda of war - 2018 - Goody.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(17.427,17.427,68.438,68.438)
geographic Narvik
geographic_facet Narvik
genre Narvik
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genre_facet Narvik
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op_source BBC features, radio voices and the propaganda of war, 1939-1941
op_relation https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/items/d9389533-bf15-4efc-b59f-74463594c263/1/
https://radar.brookes.ac.uk/radar/file/d9389533-bf15-4efc-b59f-74463594c263/1/BBC features and propaganda of war - 2018 - Goody.pdf
op_rights All rights reserved
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