Som de Rádio

Autores

  • Tim Wall Birmingham City University
  • Daniel Gambaro Universidade de São Paulo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2238-7714.no.2023.209798

Palavras-chave:

Rádio, Som, Estudos de som, Institucionalização

Resumo

O campo dos estudos radiofônicos cresceu consideravelmente nas últimas duas décadas, edificando-se sobre um comprometimento acadêmico desigual com a centenária história do meio. O renascimento dos estudos do rádio encontra paralelo com a expansão de um novo campo de estudos do som, e as percepções produzidas pelas duas áreas são mutualmente benéficas. Este ensaio busca identificar as maneiras férteis pelas quais o rádio tem sido – e pode ser – estudado, em termos de sua existência como som culturalmente assimilado. Isso significa compreender o rádio como produto de culturas nacionais distintas em momentos históricos particulares.

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Biografia do Autor

  • Tim Wall, Birmingham City University

    Doutor e mestre em Estudos Culturais pela University of Birmingham. Professor de Rádio e de Estudos da Música Popular no Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research. Anteriormente foi diretor associado de pesquisa no departamento de Artes, Mídias e Design da Birmingham City University.

  • Daniel Gambaro, Universidade de São Paulo

    Doutor e mestre em Meios e Processos Audiovisuais pela Escola de Comunicações e Artes da Universidade de São Paulo (ECA/USP). Vice-líder do MidiaSon – Grupo de Estudos e Produção em Mídias Sonoras (ECA/USP) e membro do NER – Núcleo de Estudos do Rádio da Faculdade de Biblioteconomia e Comunicação da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (Fabico/UFRGS).

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Publicado

2023-05-17

Edição

Seção

UM OUTRO OLHAR

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