Broadcasting modernism editado por Debra Rae Cohen, Michael Coyle y Jane Lewty
Idioma: Inglés Detalles de publicación: Gainesville (Florida, Estados Unidos) University Press of Florida 2013Descripción: viii, 330 páginasTema(s):| Imagen de cubierta | Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Biblioteca de origen | Colección | Ubicación en estantería | Signatura topográfica | Materiales especificados | Info Vol | URL | Copia número | Estado | Notas | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras | Reserva de ítems | Prioridad de la cola de reserva de ejemplar | Reservas para cursos | |
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Claustro 2do piso | Libro | 809.91 B863 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) | Ej.1 | Disponible | 100140096 |
Incluye referencias bibliográficas e índices
Debra Rae Cohen, Michael Coyle, and Jane Lewty Aaron Jaffe Jeffrey Sconce Timothy C. Campbell Martin Spinelli David Jenemann Sarah Wilson Jonah Willihnganz Debra Rae Cohen Todd Avery Michael Coyle Jane Lewty Brook Houglum Lesley Wheeler J. Stan Barrett Steven Connor. Introduction: Signing on Medium and metaphor. Inventing the radio cosmopolitan: vernacular modernism at a standstill Wireless ego: the pulp physics of psychoanalysis Marinetti, Marconista: the futurist manifestos and the emergence of wireless writing "Masters of sacred ceremonies": Welles, Corwin, and a radiogenic modernist literature Flying solo: the charms of the radio body Pressures and intrusions. Gertrude Stein and the radio The Voice of America in Richard Wright's Lawd today! Annexing the oracular voice: form, ideology and the BBC Desmond MacCarthy, Bloomsbury, and the aestheticist ethics of broadcasting "We speak to India": T. S. Eliot's wartime broadcasts and the frontiers of culture Negotiations, transactions, translations. "What they had heard said written": Joyce, Pound and the cross-correspondence of radio "Speech without practical locale": radio and Lorine Niedecker's aurality Materializing Millay: the 1930s radio broadcasts Updating Baudelaire for the radio age: the refractive poetics of "The pleasures of merely circulating" I switch off: Beckett and the ideals of radio