Begin forwarded message:

> From: David Hendy <[email protected]>
> Date: June 14, 2010 7:19:11 AM EDT
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [RADIO-STUDIES] BBC Radio series starting tonight
> Reply-To: David Hendy <[email protected]>
> 
> Hi,
>  
> I thought list-members might be interested to know that my five-part 'media 
> history' series starts at 11pm tonight on BBC Radio Three, and runs every 
> night this week. It's called "Rewiring the Mind", runs in 'The Essay' slot, 
> and it looks at ways in which media have shaped ways of thinking since about 
> 1900:
>  
> The Essay: Rewiring the Mind, 11pm, Radio 3::
> 
> The historian of broadcasting, David Hendy, explores the ways in which the 
> electronic media have shaped the modern mind.
> 
> Episode 1 (Monday 14th June): "The Ethereal Mind":
> How did wireless conquer the world in the early years of the twentieth 
> century, and how did a fascination with radio among scientists and writers 
> unleash new ideas about the transmission of thought and the utopian potential 
> of invisible forces?
> 
> Episode 2 (Tuesday 15th June): "The Cultivated Mind":
> 
> How effective were the efforts of the BBC to improve the 'public mind' 
> between the wars? Did broadcasts such as W.B. Yeats's poetry recitals or E.M. 
> Forster's talks foster ideas of a 'spiritual democracy' and an enlightened 
> citizenry?
> 
> Episode 3 (Wednesday 16th June): "The Anxious Mind":
> 
> Tonight the reporting of the Holocaust in 1945 and television coverage of the 
> Challenger Space Shuttle explosion in 1986. If media have made us all 
> witnesses to horror and tragedy do they also help us to come to terms with 
> suffering, or just leave us depressed at the wrongs in the world?
> 
> Episode 4 (Thursday 17th June): "The Fallible Mind":
> 
> Two seminal TV programmes: the American drama Marty, broadcast in 1953, and 
> the BBC's Face-to-Face, from 1960, used unflinching close-ups to reveal human 
> beings as flawed individuals. Did they make us more compassionate - or just 
> more obsessed with the private lives of others?
> 
> Episode 5 (Friday 18th June): "The Superficial Mind":
> 
> Might the Internet, despite its wonderful power as a repository of 
> information and creativity, be slowly degrading or enhancing our mental 
> abilities? Are our brains ready for it?
> 
> (Presenter: David Hendy. Producer: Matt Thompson).
> 
>  
> The series will also be available to listen to on BBC I-player for up to 
> seven days after broadcast.
> 
>  
> For further details and to listen again after broadcast - go to the BBC 
> website, follow links to Radio 3, then 'The Essay':
> 
> http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006x3hl
> 
>  
> David.
> 
>  
> David Hendy,
> 
> Reader in Media & Communication,
> 
> University of Westminster.
> 
>  
> 
> 

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