Podcast #284 – SpokenWeb and Literary Sound
Radio Survivor
Tuesday, February 9, 2021 - 1 seconds
On this week’s show we learn about SpokenWeb, a Canadian project focused on the preservation of literary sound recordings. Partly inspired by the energetic poetry scene of the 1960s, SpokenWeb works to preserve recordings of these live events and also describe and share this material. Our guest, Hannah McGregor, leads the SpokenWeb Podcast Task Force and hosts the SpokenWeb podcast. She shares not only the back story about SpokenWeb, but also the breadth of material featured on its monthly podcast.
Show Notes:
- SpokenWeb website
- SpokenWeb podcast
- SpokenWeb podcast ShortCuts: Short Stories about How Literature Sounds
- Podcast #275 – Making Scholarly Podcasts Count
- SpokenWeb Podcast – Drum Codes: The Language of Talking Drums
- SpokenWeb Podcast – How are We Listening Now? Signal, Noise, Silence
- Podcast #132 – Sounding Out on the Cultural Politics of Sound & Listening
- Podcast #283 – Project STAND is Archiving Student Activism
- Reviews in DH website
- PennSound website
- Jennifer’s original SpinningIndie blog
- Jennifer’s first scholarly journal article about college radio, ‘Does Indie Mean Independence?’ Freedom and Restraint in a Late 1990s U.S. College Radio Community, is in a July, 2008 edition of Radio Journal
- Eric Klein randomly mentioned an old friend who is responsible for his young fandom of Twin Peaks in 1990, Jessica Hoffmann.
The post Podcast #284 – SpokenWeb and Literary Sound appeared first on Radio Survivor.
Subscribe to this podcast
Riverton Weather
-
Tue
91°F
-
Wed
81°F
-
Thu
90°F
-
Fri
90°F
Currently playing on Delmarva FM
-
With Good Reason
4:00am - 4:30am
Sarah McConnell takes you along as she examines a wide range of topics with leading scholars.
Coming up on Delmarva FM
-
Economic Update
4:30am - 5:00am
Professor Richard Wolff and guests will discuss the current state of the economy, both locally and globally in relation to the economic crisis.
-
EcoJustice Radio
5:00am - 6:00am
EcoJustice Radio presents environmental and climate stories from a social justice frame, featuring voices not necessarily heard on mainstream media.