This article investigates the formation of recorded sound collections in Belgian and Dutch radio, which initially largely comprised commercial music discs, followed by recordings of radio music, spoken word content and sound effects. It focuses on the creation, management and use of radio sound recordings in the 1930s, as the forerunner to formalised historical archives following the Second World War, proposing to interpret this development in international comparison. The cases are considered in terms of a common experience of war and German occupation (1940-1944/45), and the \xe2\x80\x98archive-mindedness\xe2\x80\x99 of post-war radio broadcasters and those tasked with reorganising sound collections impacted by confiscations, looting, and...
This chapter investigates sound archives as dispositives of politics of national identity through so...
This chapter investigates sound archives as dispositives of politics of national identity through so...
After World War II, radio as a borderless medium became more and more important as an international...
This article investigates the formation of recorded sound collections in Belgian and Dutch radio, wh...
This article investigates the formation of recorded sound collections in Belgian and Dutch radio, wh...
This article investigates the relationship between broadcasting, sound archiving, and the rise of ra...
This paper traces the transnational entanglements in the Dutch digital media archive, with a focus o...
The project ‘Mediaoorlog’ (media war) pioneers a digital humanities approach to analyse propaganda d...
The project \xe2\x80\x98Mediaoorlog\xe2\x80\x99 (media war) pioneers a digital humanities approach t...
In this article, I chart the development of Finland’s national broadcaster Yleisradio Oy in its medi...
In this article, I chart the development of Finland\xe2\x80\x99s national broadcaster Yleisradio Oy ...
textabstractThis article explores how cultural identities are negotiated in relation to the heritage...
This article investigates the archival practices established at the German Radio Archive Lautarchiv ...
As part of continuing work on a project, A Remembered Soundscape, this paper discusses the experienc...
This paper traces the journey of a collection of German sound recordings to its current home at the ...
This chapter investigates sound archives as dispositives of politics of national identity through so...
This chapter investigates sound archives as dispositives of politics of national identity through so...
After World War II, radio as a borderless medium became more and more important as an international...
This article investigates the formation of recorded sound collections in Belgian and Dutch radio, wh...
This article investigates the formation of recorded sound collections in Belgian and Dutch radio, wh...
This article investigates the relationship between broadcasting, sound archiving, and the rise of ra...
This paper traces the transnational entanglements in the Dutch digital media archive, with a focus o...
The project ‘Mediaoorlog’ (media war) pioneers a digital humanities approach to analyse propaganda d...
The project \xe2\x80\x98Mediaoorlog\xe2\x80\x99 (media war) pioneers a digital humanities approach t...
In this article, I chart the development of Finland’s national broadcaster Yleisradio Oy in its medi...
In this article, I chart the development of Finland\xe2\x80\x99s national broadcaster Yleisradio Oy ...
textabstractThis article explores how cultural identities are negotiated in relation to the heritage...
This article investigates the archival practices established at the German Radio Archive Lautarchiv ...
As part of continuing work on a project, A Remembered Soundscape, this paper discusses the experienc...
This paper traces the journey of a collection of German sound recordings to its current home at the ...
This chapter investigates sound archives as dispositives of politics of national identity through so...
This chapter investigates sound archives as dispositives of politics of national identity through so...
After World War II, radio as a borderless medium became more and more important as an international...