Radio Waves: Poems Celebrating the Wireless

Radio Waves: Poems Celebrating the Wireless

by Sean Street (Editor)

Synopsis

In 1927, a writer in the Radio Times declared it unsurprising that poets should write about radio, 'for the new magic, which pours the music of the concert room into the stillness of the cottage and brings the song of nightingales into the heart of Town, is of the very stuff of poetry.'That early fascination with the power of the invisible waves that transmit thoughts around the globe persists, and continues to draw poems from writers who find that the kinship of both forms as purveyors of 'pictures in the mind' remains a unique one in the constantly evolving development of electronic media.In 1998, poet and broadcaster Sean Street was commissioned by BBC Radio 4 to write his sequence Radio - Ten Poems about Sound as the network's contribution to National Poetry Day. This led to a collection based on the sequence, and ultimately to this book, beginning and ending in silence, and containing in between, the words and music, the images and ideas of a medium which - like poetry - is capable of a potent partnership between maker and 'tuner-in'. Here are poems which speak of the power of radio to pour hatred and dogma into the head and the heart, beside others which celebrate Test Match Special and The Archers. The favourite aphorism about radio is that 'the pictures are better because we collaborate in their making' remains true. After all, we may hear with our ears, but we listen with our mind.

$12.99

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 136
Publisher: Enitharmon Press
Published: 22 Sep 2004

ISBN 10: 1900564394
ISBN 13: 9781900564397

Author Bio
Sean Street has published six collections of poetry, the most recent being Radio and Other Poems. He has worked in radio as a writer, producer and presenter for more than thirty years and his work is frequently to be heard on BBC Radios 3 and 4. His prose includes a number of texts on radio history, as well as writings on Gerard Manley Hopkins and The Dymock Poets. He is Professor of Radio in the Bournemouth Media School at Bournemouth University.