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Listening to British Nature: Wartime, Radio, and Modern Life, 1914-1945

  • Author: Guida, Michael

Book

$79.00

Usually despatched in 5 - 7 working days

Contents

  • Introduction
  • 1. Birdsong over the trenches: the sound of survival and escape
  • 'The air is loud with death' - listening in fear for danger
  • Sonic relief amid the shelling
  • Regenerative rhythms
  • Resilience and 'carrying on' in birds and men
  • Skyward escape with the lark
  • Conclusion
  • 2. Pastoral quietude for shell shock and national recovery
  • Quiet for the wounded?
  • Country house therapy
  • The 'beneficent alluring quietude' of the Village Centre utopia
  • Quiet for national recovery
  • Conclusion
  • 3. Broadcasting nature
  • John Reith's public service nightingale
  • In touch with cosmic harmony
  • Normalising radio with nature
  • Conclusion
  • 4. The rambler's search for the sensuous
  • Re-balancing the senses
  • Willis Marshall: into the moors
  • Nan Shepherd's merger with the mountain
  • A violent assertion of personality: hedonism in nature
  • Conclusion
  • 5. Modern birdsong and civilisation at war
  • Recording and modernising birdsong
  • Home front listening tensions
  • 'Consoling voices of the air': Ludwig Koch's broadcasts
  • Birdsong civilised and civilising
  • Conclusion
  • Afterword
  • Acknowledgements
  • Notes
  • Bibliography and sources
  • Index