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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Christine Ehrick (University of Louisville, Kentucky)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.90cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.480kg ISBN: 9781107079564ISBN 10: 110707956 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 23 July 2015 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsIntroduction: gender in and on the air; 1. Radio and the modern girl: Silvia Guerrico and Buenos Aires broadcasting; 2. A station for women in Montevideo: Radio Femenina; 3. Feminism and populism on the airwaves: Paulina Luisi and Eva Duarte de Perón; 4. Chaplin in Skirts? Niní Marshall; 5. Nené Cascallar: airing clean and dirty longing; Echoes of soundscapes past: epilogue and conclusion.ReviewsAdvance praise: 'Through a series of beautifully written accounts of women's voices as they resounded in Rio de la Plata's midcentury soundscape, this book will change the ways we listen. Christine Ehrick deftly restores a crucial sonic dimension to the conjuncture of feminism and modernity and insists on new ways to comprehend its comedic, political, and melodramatic registers. Precisely crafted, at once witty and profound, this is a superb invocation of a sonorous past.' Alejandra Bronfman, University of British Columbia Advance praise: 'By opening up the cultural history of Latin American radio to English-speaking readers, Christine Ehrick has made an enormous contribution to scholarship in itself; when combined with her nuanced and detailed focus on women's voices and the way that gender operates on the airwaves, she has produced a work that will resound across many fields. Those interested in both old and new media, in cultural history, in gender, and in sound studies must read this account of radio rioplatense, from Radio Femenina, the first all-female radio station, to the radio pioneers Silvia Guerrico, Nini Marshall, Nene Cascallar, and Eva Peron.' Michele Hilmes, University of Wisconsin Advance praise: 'This is a groundbreaking study. Christine Ehrick's focus on gender revitalizes the historiography of Latin American radio, while her analysis of such neglected figures as Silvia Guerrico and Nene Cascallar, as well as her innovative reconsideration of Eva Peron's radio career, contribute substantially to our understanding of Argentine and Uruguayan political and cultural history. Most impressively, by attending consistently to women's voices - and not just their words - Ehrick has set a methodological example that other historians of the media would do well to follow.' Matt Karush, George Mason University 'Through a series of beautifully written accounts of women's voices as they resounded in Rio de la Plata's midcentury soundscape, this book will change the ways we listen. Christine Ehrick deftly restores a crucial sonic dimension to the conjuncture of feminism and modernity and insists on new ways to comprehend its comedic, political, and melodramatic registers. Precisely crafted, at once witty and profound, this is a superb invocation of a sonorous past.' Alejandra Bronfman, University of British Columbia 'By opening up the cultural history of Latin American radio to English-speaking readers, Christine Ehrick has made an enormous contribution to scholarship in itself; when combined with her nuanced and detailed focus on women's voices and the way that gender operates on the airwaves, she has produced a work that will resound across many fields. Those interested in both old and new media, in cultural history, in gender, and in sound studies must read this account of radio rioplatense, from Radio Femenina, the first all-female radio station, to the radio pioneers Silvia Guerrico, Nini Marshall, Nene Cascallar, and Eva Peron.' Michele Hilmes, University of Wisconsin 'This is a groundbreaking study. Christine Ehrick's focus on gender revitalizes the historiography of Latin American radio, while her analysis of such neglected figures as Silvia Guerrico and Nene Cascallar, as well as her innovative reconsideration of Eva Peron's radio career, contribute substantially to our understanding of Argentine and Uruguayan political and cultural history. Most impressively, by attending consistently to women's voices - and not just their words - Ehrick has set a methodological example that other historians of the media would do well to follow.' Matt Karush, George Mason University Author InformationChristine Ehrick is Associate Professor of History at the University of Louisville, Kentucky. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |