Radio's America

The Great Depression and the Modern Mass Culture

Published Jan. 1, 2007 by University of Chicago Press.

ISBN:
9780226471914
2 stars (1 review)

The relation between the public and radio broadcasting in 1930s Depression America, including the idea of mass culture, the listening public's relation to radio, politicians on the air, charlatans on the air, intellectuals and academics considering radio, and radio for art's sake.

1 edition

Radio's America

2 stars

As radio developed and spread in Depression-era America, various groups began to notice and adjust. Public intellectuals and academics fretted over mass communication and mass culture. Demagogues (Charles Coughlin) and mountebanks (John Brinkley) moved in and prospered, as did politicians (Roosevelt). With network growth, mass culture became pre-eminent, with hit programs and devoted fan clubs on the rise, and more serious educational and artistic endeavors squeezed out by commercial considerations.

This book gives these matters the once-over lightly. If you're interested and have no prior knowledge, then this book might be interesting; otherwise, you've seen it all before (or don't care). There's a lot of history from below in the form of letters to presidents, programs and stars, but it's hard to make out anything particular about mass culture from individual letters, no matter how representative. Analysis is otherwise frustratingly light. There are occasional amusing bits (Ron DeSantis would smile …