1.0 Rationale 4
1.1 The Spoken and the Written 10
1.2 Radio and Orality 16
1.3 The Space-Bias of Radio 26
1.4 The Professionalization of Speaking 28
1.5 The Emancipation of the ‘Common’ Voice 38
1.6 Broadcasting as Social Contact 47
1.7 Broadcasting and Mass Observation 49
1.8 Knowable Communities 53
Chapter 2: From Paternalism to Participation? The Post-War BBC Regions 64
2.0 Radio Research Methodology 64
2.1 Radio Features in the Post-War Climate 69
2.2 Brandon Acton-Bond’s Micro-Local West Region Features 80
2.3 Sound and Subcultures: Denis Mitchell in the North Region 89
2.4 An Antiphony of Voices: Sam Hanna Bell in Northern Ireland 109
Chapter 3: Newfoundland’s Vernacular Radio Culture 125
3.0 Folklore and Popular Culture 125
3.1 The Barrelman 131
3.2.0 The Gerald S. Doyle News Bulletin 141
3.2.1 The Bulletin’s Creation of an Imagined Community 148
3.2.2 Humour, Folklore and Vernacular Usage 151
3.3 The Fisheries Broadcast 156
3.4 The Chronicles of Uncle Mose 169
3.5 Between Ourselves 175
3.6 Challenge for Change 182
3.7 The Fogo Process 185
Chapter 4: Editing and Editorial Control 195
4.0 The ‘Weaving Medium’ 195
4.1 Fieldwork, Poetry & Ethnography 199
4.2 Urban Soundscapes 203
4.3 Between Two Worlds: Five Generations 209
4.4 Shared Authority and the Radio Ballads 216
4.5 The Ethics of Editing 226
4.6 Charles Parker: The Admissibility of Montage after the Radio Ballads 233
4.7 New Horizons: The Wheeler/Prest Collaborations and The Reunion 238
4.8 Micro-Local Radio Features: Alan Dein (BBC) and Ronan Kelly (RTÉ) 248
4.9 Oral History and Authority 253
Chapter 5: Oral History, Local and Community Radio and Social Gain 261
5.0 Introduction 261
5.1 The Millennium Memory Bank and The Radio Research Project 263
5.2 The Linguistic Mapping of the UK for Broadcast Purposes 267
5.3 The Preservation of Local and Community Radio 274
5.4.0 Commonwealth FM 278
5.4.1 Technology, Oral History and Participation 281
5.4.2 Programming: Empire, Free Speech and Traditions 283
5.4.3 ‘Steam Radio’: Bridging the Past and the Present 286
5.4.4 The Relationship between Commonwealth FM and the Museum 288
5.5 The Philosophy, Funding and Social Gain of Community Radio 292
5.6 Connecting Histories 296
5.7 Community: A Contested Term 300
5.8 Conclusion: Communication as Ritual 305
Appendix A 320
Orality and Presence 320
Appendix B 323
The BBC’s Talks on Unemployment During the 1930s 323
Appendix C 329
The CBC’s Use of Oral History 329
Imbert Orchard 332
Appendix D 342
Notes Towards a Communication Dialectic 342
Telephone Trottoire 348
Hidden Histories 355
References 365
Radio, the new tree of speech, is capable of rekindling the key tradition of oral expression in which speech builds the village (Aw, quoted in Moore 2008).