scholarly journals Documentary Radio-play and Reality

2020 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
Keyword(s):  
2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-135
Author(s):  
Deru R Indika ◽  
Windy Utami Dewi

Penelitian ini membahas hasil analisis pelaksanaan rebranding pada “Play 99ers” Radio Bandung. Tujuan penelitian untuk mengetahui mengenai pelaksanaan rebranding dan keputusan perusahaan untuk melakukan rebranding  termasuk keputusan yang tepat atau tidak. Faktor pendorong perusahaan melakukan rebranding adalah karena pergantian kepemilikan, pelaksanaan rebranding yang dilakukan oleh perusahaan adalah mengubah positioning, nama, desain logo, dan cara komunikasi. Dimensi pengukuran analisis rebranding yang digunakan dalam penelitian ini yaitu brand repositioning, brand renaming, brand redesigning dan brand relaunching.Metode penelitian yang digunakan dalam penelitian ini adalah survey dengan metode deskriptif. Teknik pengumpulan data yang digunakan adalah studi kepustakaan, observasi, dan kuesioner. Sampel diambil dari 100 orang responden yang pernah mendengarkan “Play 99ers” Radio Bandung yang diambil dengan menggunakan teknik purposive sampling. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan rebranding yang dilakukan merupakan keputusan yang tepat karena mendapat tanggapan baik dari masyarakat.


Perfect Beat ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-75
Author(s):  
Briony Luttrell ◽  
Hannah Joyce Banks ◽  
Andy Ward ◽  
Lachlan Goold
Keyword(s):  

1999 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 307-327
Author(s):  
Shimon Levy
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 35-53
Author(s):  
Elena Ayuso Rodríguez ◽  

In 1947, BBC produces the first radio drama on Don Quixote to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Cervantes’ birth. Released in Spain and Latin America in 27 chapters, BBC defined it as “the most ambitious project ever carried out.” The goal was to enhance BBC reputation in Spain. The radio play had the participation of actors from Radio Madrid, Spanish exiles in London and Latin American professionals. BBC surrounded with experts to adapt Cervantes narrative to radio language; deal with Spanish accents diversity; and compose music, which accompanied this radio version. The Quixote of BBC spread Cervantes’ work throughout all Spanish-speaking countries and promoted the production of other Quixotes within the radio in Spain. Keywords: Radio; Radio Drama; Radio Fiction; Don Quixote; BBC.


Author(s):  
Anna Sigg

Anna Sigg, in this chapter, argues that in Embers Beckett represents trauma most of all through bodily internal sea sounds. This radio play effectively ‘blinds’ its listener and places him in a mental cave. Embers focuses on Henry, who is tortured by a roaring ‘tinnitus’, an internal sea-like sound, which reminds him of the death of his father and his own mortality. This chapter illuminates the connection between Henry’s loss and the listener’s perception of the ‘tinnitus’ by drawing on Mladen Dolar’s idea of the acousmatic object voice and Jacques Lacan’s concept of objet petit a. Henry’s ‘tinnitus’, Sigg argues, is a bodily object voice manifesting an uncanny intimation of the unconscious. It expresses Henry’s mourning and his confrontation with mortality, while also generating countermelodies to the traumatic losses inside the listener’s head.


2009 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 243-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
LAURA CULL

This article provides an exposition of four key concepts emerging in the encounter between the philosophical man of the theatre, Antonin Artaud, and the theatrical philosopher, Gilles Deleuze: the body without organs, the theatre without organs, the destratified voice and differential presence. The article proposes that Artaud's 1947 censored radio play To Have Done with the Judgment of God constitutes an instance of a theatre without organs that uses the destratified voice in a pursuit of differential presence – as a nonrepresentative encounter with difference that forces new thoughts upon us. Drawing from various works by Deleuze, including Difference and Repetition, The Logic of Sense, A Thousand Plateaus and ‘One Less Manifesto’, I conceive differential presence as an encounter with difference, or perpetual variation, as that which exceeds the representational consciousness of a subject, forcing thought through rupture rather than communicating meanings through sameness. Contra the dismissal of Artaud's project as paradoxical or impossible, the article suggests that his nonrepresentational theatre seeks to affirm a new kind of presence as difference, rather than aiming to transcend difference in order to reach the self-identical presence of Western metaphysics.


2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 130-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sam Slote

Abstract After a period of electroshock therapy, Antonin Artaud claimed to have been able to regain his name and sense of self. The dehiscence of name and identification is reprised in Artaud’s final work, the radio play Pour en finir avec le jugement de Dieu. This consists of five texts, read by four people. Each text is followed by unintelligible, glossolalic screams performed by Artaud, as if Artaud were reacting against the speech acts performed by others in his name. The structure of this play suggests the predicament of Beckett’s Unnamable: an entity reacting in pain to its attempts to articulate itself in a language that is not his, but theirs.


Author(s):  
Amanda Wrigley

Dylan Thomas' radio play Under Milk Wood was performed on stage and television soon after its BBC radio premiere won the Prix Italia in 1954. Textual analysis of the 1957 BBC television production demonstrates how it contributed new resonances deriving from the medium's performative conventions and communicative strategies. The nature of the aesthetic values sought by the professional critic and the domestic viewer are evaluated: it is observed that the comparative approach of critics, focusing overwhelmingly on the work's originating form, inhibits full engagement with the innovative creative possibilities of performances of Under Milk Wood in forms of representation with a visual dimension.


Tekstualia ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (32) ◽  
pp. 97-112
Author(s):  
Jadwiga Uchman

Artist Descending a Staircase is a radio drama in which Tom Stoppard makes an intertextual reference to the famous cubist painting of Marcel Duchamp – The Nude Descending a Staircase. Duchamp aimed not only at representing three dimensionality of the object on the two dimensional canvass (which was the attempt common to all the cubists) but also the notion of movement by means of a stroboscopic effect. Tom Stoppard, working in a different medium, tries to represent reality by means of the radio medium. In the process he invites the listeners to actively participate in the process of creating meaning. He sets yet another ambush for the listeners and makes them discover that the tape recording heard by them at the beginning and end of the play does not present a murder (as the characters of this short radio play assume) but an accident – Donner was not killed by one of his friends but fell down the stairs while chasing a fl y which was destroying Beauchamp’s tape of silence.


Tekstualia ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (32) ◽  
pp. 75-84
Author(s):  
Anna R. Burzyńska

The article investigates writing strategies employed by Stanisław Grochowiak as an author of radio plays. Burzyńska analyses two of his works: Zaczarowana stacja (Enchanted railway station) and Perła (The Pearl) based on the novella by John Steinbeck. The article focuses on tracing differences between a theatrical play, a narrative text and a radio play and describes various methods that enabled Grochowiak to turn apparent restrictions of radio (e.g. „invisibility” of radio plays) into artistic advantages.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document