Television in the age of radio: modernity, imagination, and the making of a medium
Penulis
: Philip W. Sewell
Subyek
: Television broadcasting— Social aspects— United States, Television
broadcasting— United States— History— 20th century
Penerbit
: Rutgers University Press
Ringkasan :Pulp publishing mogul Hugo Gernsback kicked off the June 1927 issue of Radio
News with an editorial proclaiming, “With the official recognition of Television
by the Radio Commission, as well as the actual successful demonstration early
in April by the American Telegraph and Telephone Co., it may be said that television
has finally arrived.”1 This was not television’s first moment of arrival,
and it was far from the last. Gernsback’s pronouncement and the editorial that
followed do, however, point to some significant matters. First, that the United
States’ most widely read radio magazine and its editor- in- chief were heralding
television’s arrival several decades before it became a domestic commonplace
testifies to a long period during which television existed as an object of conversation
and imagination rather than a device in the home for (most of) the
public. Second, the variance in capitalization between the first and second uses
of the word television may be a sign of lax or eccentric copyediting, but it also
hints at an uncertainty about usage that was in fact typical of articles about TV
in the 1920s. Third, that Gernsback framed this arrival in terms of corporate display
and governmental sanction suggests the matrix of institutional claims that
would be made on and for the medium. Finally, since this was but one of many
arrivals, Gernsback’s declaration indicates that what credibly constituted television
and its moment of accomplishment and recognition was subject to change
and dispute. All of these circumstances stem from the roles that culture and
language— particularly as manifested in systems of authority and evaluation— play
in making and managing a social, technical, and economic phenomenon such as
television. In the case of early television those roles were played on a number of
stages as individuals and institutions thought and talked about television.
This book explores the very real impact that language and culture have on
our world and how we live in it, taking as its case study the role that imagination played in effecting television as a technology, industry, and medium in the
United States. In particular, it focuses on the ways in which culture shaped the
understandings of and aspirations for television in the period from the mid-
1920s to the late 1940s. Those knowledges and hopes matter not only because
they worked to coordinate a host of human activities that were crucial to the
development of television but also because they demonstrate some of the
ways in which people made sense of and a place for themselves in industrialized
modernity.
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