Document details

On Air: Methods and Meanings of Radio

London: Arnold (1998), xv, 174 pp.

Contains glossary pp. 149-161, bibliogr. pp. 163-164, index

ISBN 0-340-65231-4 (pbk)

Reviewed in: Media, Culture & Society, vol. 21:5 (1999), pp. 698-700

Signature commbox: 30-General-E 1998

"Superseded by television as the primary source of entertainment and information, radio still has a unique place in the mass media spectrum. At once powerfully pervasive and totally invisible, it's a fascinating subject for study. On Air adopts a wide-ranging theoretical and critical approachto provide an in-depth examination of radio's codes (speech, music, noise, and silence), the conventions of using these codes, and the dominant modes of reception. The text offers a vocabulary and methodology for analyzing radio programs, drawing on work by both media theorists and professionalbroadcasters in Britain, Australia, and North America. Written by an academic and a practitioner, On Air provides a critical overview of radio for media students, as well as suggestions for practical activities, a time-line of major events in the history of radio, and a glossary of key terms." (Publisher description)