Radio as a Tool for the Social Sciences: Production and Consumption of Public Culture at Michigan Radio (NPR) ·
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Authors
Thiry, Kaitlyn
Issue Date
2013
Type
Thesis
Language
en_US
Keywords
Alternative Title
Abstract
This paper examines the creation of public culture through the content of public radio,
and the roles of the producers and consumers of that content. By creating a product of news and
culture that is then consumed by listeners, public radio has the capacity to both reflect and shape
the ideals, priorities, and sensibilities of its audience. By influencing the listener, the public
culture consumed may shape the listener into a Subject, entering the Subject into a dualistic
relationship between structure and agency. As the producers of public culture respond to listener
desires while at once prioritizing the cultural model of the news and culture they produce, I argue
that the content of public radio is reflective of the social trends in which it is situated, and can be
used as a tool for anthropology and sociology in measuring the social and political movements of
a given broadcast area. Specifically, I link the advancements of women in radio over time with
the nature of public media through the idea of public culture, and in historical contexts that may
be friendly or hostile to women in positions of power, as holders of information, and as members
of public life more broadly. In my experience as an intern in production at NPR Member Station
Michigan Radio, there. did not appear to be an influential relationship between gender and
experience in the workplace, though I understand this to be atypical in areas of senior
management and in the field of broadcasting more generally, as verified by my research and
observations.
Description
iv, 45 p.
Citation
Publisher
Kalamazoo, Mich. : Kalamazoo College.
License
U.S. copyright laws protect this material. Commercial use or distribution of this material is not permitted without prior written permission of the copyright holder. All rights reserved.