Many arts have influenced the cinema over extended periods of time. One art – radio drama – is an exception, for we can date the onset of its influence from the coming of synchronous sound to the cinema in 1926 and the culmination of it with the creation of CITIZEN KANE in 1941. Film and radio drama were thereafter to part company, each having learned what it could from the other. What had the cinema learned from radio drama? If we look closely at CITIZEN KANE, we can learn much about the virtues and limitations of radio design, cinematical design and the design of CITIZEN KANE itself
The unparalleled significance of social technologies to modern culture is largely undisputed. Instru...
This essay in the field of visual culture and urban space, argues that the sound of film infiltrates...
An Ear for an Eye: Greek Tragedy on Radio examines the dramaturgical principles involved in the adap...
History of cinema does not consist merely of masterpieces, but also of films that are unfinished, a...
Lecture traces the rise of High Modernism vis-a-vis cinema, focusing on why mainstream American film...
The history of the development of sound on film offers us lessons for the development of sound and m...
At first glance, silent film and audio drama may appear antithetical modes of expressio...
An introduction to the causes and effects of the 'revolution' that occurred between 1927 and 1930 wi...
Film sound scholarship over the past decades has focused primarily on issues such as sound technolog...
In this paper I examine cinematic representations of radio listenership as instances of distributed ...
Northern California based filmmakers in the late 1960s and 1970s pushed the traditional boundaries o...
At first glance, silent film and audio drama may appear antithetical modes of expressio...
2016 University Libraries Undergraduate Research Award Winner---This paper analyses, compares and co...
Creative radio is written and produced from an unavoidable set of material conditions, but received ...
Few artists can claim to have had such success in so many forms of media as Orson Welles. His vision...
The unparalleled significance of social technologies to modern culture is largely undisputed. Instru...
This essay in the field of visual culture and urban space, argues that the sound of film infiltrates...
An Ear for an Eye: Greek Tragedy on Radio examines the dramaturgical principles involved in the adap...
History of cinema does not consist merely of masterpieces, but also of films that are unfinished, a...
Lecture traces the rise of High Modernism vis-a-vis cinema, focusing on why mainstream American film...
The history of the development of sound on film offers us lessons for the development of sound and m...
At first glance, silent film and audio drama may appear antithetical modes of expressio...
An introduction to the causes and effects of the 'revolution' that occurred between 1927 and 1930 wi...
Film sound scholarship over the past decades has focused primarily on issues such as sound technolog...
In this paper I examine cinematic representations of radio listenership as instances of distributed ...
Northern California based filmmakers in the late 1960s and 1970s pushed the traditional boundaries o...
At first glance, silent film and audio drama may appear antithetical modes of expressio...
2016 University Libraries Undergraduate Research Award Winner---This paper analyses, compares and co...
Creative radio is written and produced from an unavoidable set of material conditions, but received ...
Few artists can claim to have had such success in so many forms of media as Orson Welles. His vision...
The unparalleled significance of social technologies to modern culture is largely undisputed. Instru...
This essay in the field of visual culture and urban space, argues that the sound of film infiltrates...
An Ear for an Eye: Greek Tragedy on Radio examines the dramaturgical principles involved in the adap...