1st Edition

Transnational Radio Monitoring in the Twentieth Century Practices of Propaganda and Surveillance in Europe and Beyond, 1930-1990

110 Pages
by Routledge

110 Pages
by Routledge

110 Pages
by Routledge

 Radio monitoring is an important feature of broadcasting history and monitoring reports form a treasure trove for historians. This volume offers six case studies that provide new insights on the importance of radio monitoring during the Second World War and the Cold War. Radio broadcasting is not only about transmission, but also about listening. From the start of the medium’s history, radio... Read more

Introduction – The Act of Listening: Radio Monitoring, 1930–1990
Suzanne Bardgett, Friederike Kind-Kovács and Vincent Kuitenbrouwer

1. The Battle for Neutrality: The Listening Service of the Dutch Government in Exile During the Second World War
Vincent Kuitenbrouwer

 

2. The Raj in Radio Wars: BBC Monitoring Reports on Broadcasts for Indian Audiences During the Second World War
Diya Gupta

 

3. “Listening Became Indispensable for Life …”: Strategies and Goals of Radio Monitoring in the Warsaw Ghetto
Maria Ferenc Piotrowska

 

4. The Sound of Revolution: BBC Monitoring and the Hungarian uprising, 1956
Alban Webb

 

5. Talking to Listeners: Clandestine Audiences in the Early Cold War
Friederike Kind-Kovács

 

6. Comrades at War: Soviet Radio Broadcasting during the 1979 Sino-Vietnamese War
Peter Busch

Biography

Suzanne Bardgett was Head of Research and Academic Partnerships at Imperial War Museums (IWM) from 2010 to 2023, and during 2015-2016 led the AHRC- supported international research network on the BBC Monitoring collection.  She now writes books for IWM, and is Series Editor of The Holocaust and its Contexts.

Friederike Kind-Kovács is a senior researcher at the Hannah Arendt Institute at Technische Universität Dresden and a lecturer at Regensburg University. She is a twentieth-century historian with a special interest in the transnational history of Central Europe and especially the history of childhood. She is the author of Budapest’s Children: Humanitarian Relief in the Aftermath of the Great War.

Vincent Kuitenbrouwer is Senior Lecturer of History of International Relations at the University of Amsterdam. He is specialized in nineteenth- and twentieth-century imperial history, and has a special interest in colonial media networks. He currently works on Dutch international radio broadcasting in the late colonial period and the era of decolonization.