Liveness and Recording in the Media
By (Author) Andrew Crisell
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Red Globe Press
20th April 2012
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
001.3
Paperback
128
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
191g
We think of radio and television as live media. Yet much of their output is pre-recorded. And if we value liveness so highly, why do we often consume their output some time after it has been broadcast This book provides some unexpected answers about the meaning of 'liveness' and 'recording', the complexity of their relationship, and their significance not just for television and radio but the popular music which is radio's mainstay. Written in a clear and lively style, the book sets television and radio in the context of other media and traces the history of liveness and recording. To the relationship between these qualities it ascribes the rise of the serial programmes that characterise so much broadcasting. Citing well-known examples of broadcast output and making extensive use of BBC 1 as a case-study, it supports its arguments by taking illustrations and parallels from theatre, philosophical writing and even poetry.
ANDREW CRISELL is Professor of Broadcasting Studies at Sunderland University, UK. He is the author of Understanding Radio(1994), An Introductory History of British Broadcasting(2002) and A Study of Modern Television(2006), the co-author of Radio Journalism(2009) with Guy Starkey, and the editor of More than a Music Box: Radio Cultures and Communities in a Multi Media World (2004).