Race, Class, and Sonic Autonomy in the Tower Blocks: Pirate Radio’s Exilic Possibilities
Dublin Core | PKP Metadata Items | Metadata for this Document | |
1. | Title | Title of document | Race, Class, and Sonic Autonomy in the Tower Blocks: Pirate Radio’s Exilic Possibilities |
2. | Creator | Author's name, affiliation, country | Larisa Kingston Mann; Klein College of Media and Communication Temple University, PA; United States |
3. | Subject | Discipline(s) | |
3. | Subject | Keyword(s) | radio, pirate, exilic spaces, autonomy, intimacy, broadcasting, dance music |
4. | Description | Abstract | Despite 60 years of bans, raids, arrests, confiscations, and fines, unlicensed (“pirate”) radio has persisted in the United Kingdom. Why such persistence, even after the introduction of noncommercial licenses and the rise of Web radio? Many factors influence communities’ choice of media technology: Legality and physical location especially shape a technology’s racial, class, and cultural affordances. During the 1980s–2020s, U.K. pirate radio stations’ physical locations—particularly those in public housing towers—facilitated access to and control of broadcasting by the working-class and Black communities, illustrating how social context shapes technological possibility. This article presents a sociohistorical analysis of pirate radio’s capacity to function as an “exilic space” that fostered collective intimacy and relative autonomy. In doing so, the article identifies what is at stake in the changing legal and technological contexts for broadcast media to better understand its capacity to be liberatory or extractive. |
5. | Publisher | Organizing agency, location | USC Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism |
6. | Contributor | Sponsor(s) | Fordham University Dept of Communication & Media Studies; Klein College of Media and Communication at Temple University |
7. | Date | (YYYY-MM-DD) | 2023-02-13 |
8. | Type | Status & genre | Peer-reviewed Article |
8. | Type | Type | |
9. | Format | File format | |
10. | Identifier | Uniform Resource Identifier | https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/19106 |
11. | Source | Title; vol., no. (year) | International Journal of Communication; Vol 17 (2023) |
12. | Language | English=en | en |
13. | Relation | Supp. Files | |
14. | Coverage | Geo-spatial location, chronological period, research sample (gender, age, etc.) | |
15. | Rights | Copyright and permissions |
Copyright (c) |