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“Speaking to the Soviets”: Podcasting, Public Diplomacy and the Blinken Open Society Archives’ Radio Liberty Audio Collection |
Tartalom: | https://doi.org/10.14267/cojourn.2018v3n2a2 |
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Archívum: | Corvinus Kutatások |
Gyűjtemény: |
Status = Published
Subject = History Subject = Media and communication Type = Article |
Cím: |
“Speaking to the Soviets”: Podcasting, Public Diplomacy and
the Blinken Open Society Archives’ Radio Liberty Audio
Collection
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Létrehozó: |
Westlake, Steve
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Kiadó: |
Institute of International Studies, Corvinus University of Budapest
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Dátum: |
2018-10-31
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Téma: |
Media and communication
History
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Tartalmi leírás: |
This article introduces and evaluates the experience of producing the Speaking to the
Soviets podcast, a six-part audio documentary series which explores the history of
transnational broadcasting during the Cold War through a close analysis of the Blinken
Open Society Archives’ Radio Liberty Russian Broadcast Collection. I present some
preliminary notions on the value of podcasting as a general medium for the presentation
and conduct of historical research on radio broadcasting. Next, I discuss the reasons why
the OSA’s Radio Liberty Russian Broadcast collection represents a rich and rewarding
collection for historians of the Cold War which is particularly suited to being explored
and evaluated via podcasting. I describe the conceptual and methodological choices made
during the process of the project as a whole, before concluding with an attempt at
evaluating the contemporary significance and potential future impact and implications of
the project. This question is approached from the point of view of both the sponsoring
institutions (Central European University and the Blinken OSA) and the practitioner
(myself).
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Típus: |
Article
PeerReviewed
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Formátum: |
application/pdf
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Azonosító: |
Westlake, Steve (2018) “Speaking to the Soviets”: Podcasting, Public Diplomacy and the Blinken Open Society Archives’ Radio Liberty Audio Collection. Corvinus Journal of International Affairs, 3 (2). pp. 4-11. DOI https://doi.org/10.14267/cojourn.2018v3n2a2
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