Nazi Soundscapes: Sound, Technology and Urban Space in Germany, 1933-1945
Author(s): Carolyn C. Birdsall (Author)
Publisher: Routledge
Publication Date: 9 Feb. 2014
Edition: 1st
Language: English
Print length: 272 pages
ISBN-10: 9089644261
ISBN-13: 9789089644268
Book Description
Following the formation of the German National Socialist Party in the 1920s, various forms of sound (popular music, voice, noise and silence) and media technology (radio and loudspeaker systems) were configured as useful to the party’s political programme. Focusing on the urban “soundscape” of Düsseldorf, the author makes a persuasive case for investigating such sound events and technological devices in their specific contexts of production and reception. Nazi Soundscapes identifies strategies for controlling space and reworking identity patterns, but also the ongoing difficulties in manipulating mediated sounds and the spaces of listening reception, whether in the home, workplace, the cinema, public rituals or with wartime siren systems. The study revises visualist notions of social control, and reveals the disciplinary functions of listening (as eavesdropping) as well as the sonic dimensions to exclusion and violence during Nazism. An essential title for everyone interested in the links between German political culture, audiovisual media and urban history, Nazi Soundscapes provides a fascinating analysis of the cultural significance of sound between the 1920s and early 1940s.Click here for the sound clips discussed in the book.
Editorial Reviews
Review
Birdsall’s study is an extremely successful example of how to productively connect research questions and methods from both history and media studies. By focusing on sound, not in isolation, but by researching in its interaction with images and bodies in (urban) space, she demonstrates how Sound Studies can be fruitfully adopted for the study of political history. [-]- Daniel Morat (Zeitschrift f�r Geschichtswissenschaft, 2013) [-][-]”Carolyn Birdsall’s excellent Nazi Soundscapes: Sound, Technology and Urban Space in Germany is …. a study of means and impact of the Nazi propaganda machine, closely attentive to the favoured instruments of radio and the loudspeaker, and to the physical spaces of their reception. The wisdom of Birdsall’s choice to locate the bulk of her work in Dusseldorf and not Berlin, or more broadly, the state, is manifest throughout the text, as broad psychologisms, grand ideas and sweeping media tropes are challenged repeatedly by local events, priorities and interests.” – Barry Salmon (Urban History, 2014) [-][-]”Carolyn Birdsall makes an important contribution to our understanding of how National Socialism negotiated the modern public sphere using new technologies for its highly sophisticated propaganda apparatus. Beyond that, she models a methodology and develops conceptual tools that will most certainly prove to be useful in other historical and cultural contexts where sound as medium participates in organizing public space.” – Marc Silberman (Council for European Studies, 2013)[-]
From the Back Cover
Na de formatie van de NSDAP in de jaren ’20 werden verschillende vormen van geluid (stem, ruis, stilte, populaire muziek) en mediatechnologieën (radio- en luidsprekersystemen) ingezet voor hun politieke programma. Vanuit de historisch invalshoek van het stedelijke ‘soundscape’ van Düsseldorf, onderzoekt de auteur de productie en receptie van deze g
About the Author
Carolyn Birdsall is Assistant Professor in Media Studies at the University of Amsterdam. Her publications and research interests are in the fields of media and cultural history, with a particular focus on popular music and radio, film and television sound, non-fiction genres and urban studies. She is co-editor of Sonic Mediations: Body, Sound, Technology (2008) and Inside Knowledge: (Un)Doing Ways of Knowing in the Humanities (2009).