Throughout the 1930s through the mid-1940s, the people of America witnessed two of the most traumatic events in American history, the Great Depression and World War II. During these two decades, the people turned to radio as their form of “escape” allowing them to forget about the events happening around them. Radio culture in America began to explode with nearly twenty-eight million households owning a radio by the end of 1939. Franklin Delano Roosevelt utilized this technology to reach out to the American people and discuss the events occurring not only around the world but also in their backyards. FDR served as President of the United States from 1933 until his death in 1945. He created a relationship with the citizens of America that no...
The thesis looks at the strategies American presidents have used to communicate with the public in r...
As Europe descended into increasingly dire political, social and economic conditions in the latter ...
While a rich literature exists on presidential communications (including the public/rhetorical presi...
Throughout the 1930s through the mid-1940s, the people of America witnessed two of the most traumati...
From the 1930s through the mid-1940s, the people of America witnessed two of the most traumatic even...
Between 1933 and 1944, President Franklin D. Roosevelt gave a series of thirty radio addresses that ...
John Curtin and Franklin D. Roosevelt developed a radio ethos to convey public appearances of transp...
This project examines what the newly burgeoning medium of radio meant to Americans in the Depression...
The historiography of President Franklin Roosevelt\u27s fireside chats, up until this point, have fo...
In 1930 a group of educators formed the National Committee on Education by Radio (NCER) to fight for...
The history of radio is inextricably suffused with politics. Though licensed experimental stations w...
FDR promoted U.S. participation in the United Nations in several ways. In this article I focus on hi...
Eleanor Roosevelt communicated with the public through a variety of media, both before, during and f...
Includes bibliographical references.On election eve, 1932, when it was all over but the statistical ...
University of Minnesota M.A. thesis. December 2011. Major: Communication studies. Advisor: Dr. Karly...
The thesis looks at the strategies American presidents have used to communicate with the public in r...
As Europe descended into increasingly dire political, social and economic conditions in the latter ...
While a rich literature exists on presidential communications (including the public/rhetorical presi...
Throughout the 1930s through the mid-1940s, the people of America witnessed two of the most traumati...
From the 1930s through the mid-1940s, the people of America witnessed two of the most traumatic even...
Between 1933 and 1944, President Franklin D. Roosevelt gave a series of thirty radio addresses that ...
John Curtin and Franklin D. Roosevelt developed a radio ethos to convey public appearances of transp...
This project examines what the newly burgeoning medium of radio meant to Americans in the Depression...
The historiography of President Franklin Roosevelt\u27s fireside chats, up until this point, have fo...
In 1930 a group of educators formed the National Committee on Education by Radio (NCER) to fight for...
The history of radio is inextricably suffused with politics. Though licensed experimental stations w...
FDR promoted U.S. participation in the United Nations in several ways. In this article I focus on hi...
Eleanor Roosevelt communicated with the public through a variety of media, both before, during and f...
Includes bibliographical references.On election eve, 1932, when it was all over but the statistical ...
University of Minnesota M.A. thesis. December 2011. Major: Communication studies. Advisor: Dr. Karly...
The thesis looks at the strategies American presidents have used to communicate with the public in r...
As Europe descended into increasingly dire political, social and economic conditions in the latter ...
While a rich literature exists on presidential communications (including the public/rhetorical presi...