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Tuning in to the Geographies of Radio
Catherine Wilkinson
Edge Hill University
Radio is a landscape, a place inhibited by heroes and villains(Vowell, 1996)
Introduction
The literature on geography and radio is notably scarce. Though regrettable, the largely
dormant study of radio in the geography literature is not unsurprising, owing to geopolitics’
fixation with visual media (Pinkerton and Dodds, 2009). Smith (1994) supports this point,
highlighting geography’s emphasis on landscapes over soundscapes. More recently, a number
of scholars have presented soundscapes as relevant to geographical debate, moving away
from discussions of space and place which have been embedded within visual
epistemologies, towards a new subfield of sonic geographies (e.g. Boland, 2010; Boyd and
Duffy, 2012; Gallagher and Prior, 2014; Matless, 2005). This chapter devotes attention to the
portable soundscape of radio. Using Truax’s (2000:4) definition, a soundscape is: “the totality
of all sounds within a location with an emphasis on the relationship between individual’s or
society’s perception of, understanding of and interaction with the sonic environment”. In
particular, this chapter presents the origins and historical context of radio, and theoretical
perspectives to the study of radio by scholars across the globe. Radio is defined herein, in line
with Pluskota (2015:327), as the evolving traditional terrestrial-based broadcast model, which
when combined with satellite radio and Internet technologies, make up the “media listening
experience” market we recognise today.
Radio’s character as an invisible and perpetual medium makes it difficult to study. This has
not dissuaded interdisciplinary scholarship from focussing on the history and cultural,
political and economic impacts of radio. However, radio has not been given the study that it
deserves, particularly due to the burgeoning scholarship on television which has attracted
attention as a subject of historical analysis (Sterling, 2009), and its impacts on children and
other vulnerable groups (Hilmes, 2002). As Hilmes (2002) points out, it was not until the rise
of political talk radio in the 1980’s that the medium began to receive due critical attention,
the majority of which was from a sociological perspective. This has led some authors to
contend that, even within academic media research, radio struggles to find voice and
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definition (Johnson and Foote, 2009). Others have argued that, uniting people
electromagnetically, radio creates a set of intersecting communities, not only radio listeners,
but also those who study radio as a technological, social, cultural, and historical phenomenon
(Squier, 2003a). Geographers are one such community of scholars.
This chapter is structured into three parts. First, it outlines the origins and historical context
of radio. Second, it highlights conceptual debates about how radio has been studied by
geographers. Third, the spatial perspective of radio is outlined. Fourth, technological
convergences in relation to radio are considered, with a particular focus on radio in the digital
age.
A brief history of radio
Radio histories differ across countries and nations; radio in one country or locality is not the
same as it is elsewhere – it is used differently in different places and at different times, and
has different meanings associated with it (Tacchi, 2000). What remains consistent is the way
that radio functions as more than just a technology or a method of communication, but as a
process through which we, as human beings, can represent and negotiate our desires and fears
(Squier, 2003a). This brief outline of the origins and historical context of radio does not focus
on any particular geographical context, but provides a more general trajectory of the
development of radio broadcasting.
Radio is a technology dating back to the nineteenth century, and has been heralded as
comparable to “the apparatus in the labs of Frankenstein movies” (Douglas, 1999:49) during
this time. Even in its infancy, radio made an impact on the cultural imagination (Squier,
2003a). In the 1920s, radio grew into the medium through which farmers followed prices,
weather, and other variables. In rural over and above in urban life, radio became the key
source of information and entertainment, and an invaluable connection to the rest of the
world (Craig, 2001; Ulin, 2003). In 1927, the content of radio programs was under
examination within the context of localism, as a study of broadcasting in New York City
concluded that radio was, at that time, “used almost entirely as an entertainment device for
the advertising of the radio itself, and of the business which provide[d] the programs” (Lichty
and Topping, 1976:49).
The fifties and sixties witnessed the explosion of a youth radio market. With the flourishing
of FM radio during this time, a new audience emerged, largely male and obsessed with “high
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fidelity” (Squier, 2003a:13). Resultantly, radio became a battlefield between automated
playlists of Top 40 hits, and the non-conforming programming of college FM stations
(Squier, 2003a). By the 1970s and 1980s, the growth of talk radio instigated a new radio-
based activism, as well as alternative models for male selfhood (Squier, 2003a). By the end of
the twentieth century, radio became a taken-for-granted medium, outshone by new
technologies including computers, digital television, and mobile telephones. This was only
the beginning. Changes in radio technology provided a variety of new programming models:
Internet radio, digital radio, and low-power radio (Squier, 2003a). In the process of
constructing these new technologies, certain aspects of radio’s potential were exiled, while
others were enhanced, as I tease out later in this chapter.
Conceptual debates
Radio has long been heralded as holding an “unobtrusive presence in the geography of
domestic space” (Moores, 1988:23). It is used to maintain or alter mood, it is emotionally
evocative, comforting and a part of domestic soundscapes (Tacchi, 2000). Other research
(Cordeiro, 2012:501) has positioned radio as an “everyday companion”, assisting people to
structure their routines and feeding their daily informational needs. With radio being
personified as such, important geographical issues come to the fore concerning radio’s
ubiquitous nature, and holds resonance with Pinkerton and Dodds’ (2009:16) observation that
“radio listening whether in bed, while taking a shower or eating our breakfast is part of the
daily fabric of many people around the world.” As Pinkerton and Dodds (2009) note, much
literature now exists on how sound is entrenched in history, cultures, institutions,
technologies and, indeed, geographies, and the consequences of this, though this is not
specifically related to radio. Heeding Pinkerton and Dodds (2008), when geographical work
is concentrated on radio, this tends to focus on large scale geopolitical questions in relation to
international, as opposed to small scale, stations.
In their seminal paper, Pinkerton and Dodds (2009) note that extant research is dominated by
the social and cultural in music, and that few researchers (cf. Power, 2001) have explored in
substantial empirical depth the geopolitical consequences of radio broadcasting, or listening
more generally. Further, the authors note that radio scholarship has predominantly focussed
on domestic radio environments in the western world. The authors cite Liebes’ (2006)
examination of Israeli broadcasting. According to Liebes (2006), radio has the potential to
create a number of acoustic spaces within which individual listeners, and indeed
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communities, can communicate their shared identities. The authors conclude by calling for
further critical study of radio, sound and broadcasting/listener engagement within the
geographical literature.
The most poignant example of such in extant literature is Vaillant’s (2002) consideration of
local radio in Chicago between 1921 and 1935. According to the author, during the 1920s,
local broadcasting transcended a ‘radio imaginary’ or an ‘imagined community’, instead
promoting face-to-face community life, for instance by encouraging listeners to participate in
programs or by organising community socials. As Vaillant (2002:26) eloquently asserts:
The airwaves became a neighbourhood as well as a metropolitan stage, and many listeners tuning to independent stations swelled with pleasure and pride at hearing music and cultural programs that acknowledge and validate their particular languages, histories, and cultural backgrounds for both the designated group and the larger audience to hear.
I quote Vaillant (2002) at length here because he evokes an image of radio broadcasting and
listening as a community per se. Vaillant (2002) echoes Keough’s (2010:77) evaluation of
community radio as “more than just an FM frequency, but rather a meaningful place to
station personnel and the listening community”. Through a case study approach, Vaillant
(2002:26) situates independent radio broadcasting and listening within a struggle among
urban ethnic, immigrant, and middle- and working-class Americans at this time to “claim
urban space, shape public culture, and define the contested terms of ethnic difference, racial
differentiation, and Americanism”. This represents an important step in using radio as a
means of empowerment and to give a voice to those deprived of one - those experiencing
voice poverty (see Salazar, 2009).
Other scholarship has explored the subversive power of radio. Douglas (2004) studies radio’s
power to sustain emotional states, to ignite the imagination, and to enable expression of
stigmatised parts of the self. Street (2012:29) tells how radio producers quickly came to
understand the capacity of the medium to cross barriers between fact and imagination, for
naturalism to impressionism. The power of radio to do this has often been demonstrated in
the “other worldliness” of imaginings, an area where the pictorial nature of sound is
particularly suggestive. By activating experiences aurally, radio taps an influential and deep
connection to the human brain, as cognitive scientists are discovering (Squier 2003b).
Radio’s ‘blindness’ in this sense is not a disadvantage, but an opportunity to create a new
kind of intimacy and individual fantasies (Munich, 2003). McChesney (2001:v) heralded
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radio as “the quintessential people’s medium”. Certainly, establishing a bond with the listener
has been positioned as essential to the success of audio programming (Johnson, 2015). As
Sauls (2011) points out, the dedication of radio broadcasting to connecting to its listeners has
been at the forefront since its inception. As is clear then, in line with Squier (2003a),
scholarship has positioned radio as constructed by, and in its turn helping to shape, society
and culture.
Spatial perspective
In terms of communication technologies, radio is the most local of the mass media
(Hunteman, 2003). Geographically bound by the physical properties of electromagnetic
waves, radio was traditionally defined by its broadcast range (Hunteman, 2003). The idea of
community, so central to broadcast regulation, began to shift from its former definition as a
local phenomenon to something that could extend across an entire nation. By including the
listening audience in the content of radio shows, programs made this new national audience
central to radio entertainment. Audience participation programs accelerated the process by
which the new mass audience of radio came to stand in for the nation in general and “the
people” in particular (Loviglio, 2002:90). However, as Hilmes and Loviglio (2002) remind
us, this shift towards togetherness, often heralded as a positive thing, was for some
considered a threat to traditional notions of both community and individualism. This
changing idea of community most widely impacted on understandings of community radio.
The alternative and community radio pioneered in the turbulent 1960’s and 70’s and provided
a platform for local voices and concerns in hundreds of cities and towns globally. Reed and
Hanson (2006:214) define the community served by community stations as “in a specific
geographic area”. Others take a more networked view, asserting that community stations
reach people who live in dispersed locations, yet have shared interests (e.g. Gumucio-Dagron,
2013; McCain and Lowe, 1990). Encompassing both strands, Coyer (2006) presents
community radio as serving communities of interest, providing the examples of lesbians and
gay men, blind and partially sighted people, Afro-Caribbeans and Asians, and/or small
geographic areas. Crucially, however, while being broad in appeal, these stations remain
situated within the context of their local areas. Taken together then, in line with Squier
(2003b), ‘community radio’ is generally understood to be local programming that serves the
cultural, civic, or informational needs of an audience that is either geographically or
demographically limited.
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As well as considering the wider community served, Leal (2009) devotes attention to the
community of staff and volunteers working within the stations or, to borrow Gaynor and
O’Brien’s (2011:31) term, the “community within”. Leal (2009) finds that the ‘community
within’ exhibits a considerable degree of diversity with regards to gender, age and cultural
background, although predominantly including marginalised sections of the population,
particularly the unemployed. Leal (2009:156) refers to community radio stations as
“communities manifested from the discursive practices of individuals who share physical
space and a similar social situation”, depicting a community that has a geographical base, yet
serves a common interest. These conceptualisations of community reflect a social network
approach (e.g. Fabiansson, 2006), whereby community is (dis)located - situated in, yet
distinct from, the locale.
Other community radio research has recognised the contested nature of community. Using
the case of Radio KC in Paarl, Western Cape, Davidson (2004) considers the steps that staff
must take to understand the communities they serve. The importance of this lies in
identifying programming content that includes stories and voices from within the community.
From observations and participatory research, Davidson (2004) concludes that the concept of
community extends beyond the geographical community outlined in the station’s broadcast
licence, being cognitive, normative and imagined. Interestingly, Davidson (2004) discovers
that, while staff and volunteers at Radio KC came from within the geographical vicinity of
the station, they did not perceive themselves as ‘the community’, rather they considered
themselves as serving the community. In a study of XK FM, a community radio station in
Platfontain, South Africa, Mhlanga (2009) finds heterogeneity in the community served by
the station. Kanayama (2007) draws the same conclusion in a study of the role of community
radio in Japan. These readings stand to counter understandings of community as homogenous
which, as Young (1990) argues, typically privilege unity over difference.
During the 1930s and 1940s radio played a pivotal role in defining the national community.
Radio was the only medium capable of addressing the entire country simultaneously, and its
voice was both literal and figurative, consisting of an address to a national “we” by radio
networks, as well as providing a model of what a “real American” should sound like (Russo,
2002:258). As Hilmes and Loviglio (2002) point out, radio waves and their impermeable
mobility across social boundaries served as a symbol for national togetherness. This, of
course, builds on Anderson’s (1983) conception of an imagined community (see also Hilmes,
1997 and Karpf, 2013 who position radio this way). ‘Imagined communities’, as outlined by
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Anderson (1983), counters the idea that communities are defined by territory, claiming that
communities are mental constructs.
Anderson’s (1983:4) point of departure is that nationality, “nation-ness” and nationalism are
cultural artefacts. Anderson (1983:6) defines the nation as “an imagined political community
- and imagined as both inherently limited and sovereign”. He argues that it is imagined
because nation members will never know their fellow-members, yet they carry with them the
image of their communion. This is notwithstanding that there may be exploitation and
inequality between fellow citizens. Despite the power of media in shaping ideas of the
modern nation, Anderson (1983) positions geography as remaining important. To explain, the
nation is imagined as ‘limited’ because it has finite boundaries, beyond which other nations
lie. It is in this sense that Anderson (1983) touches on the importance of radio for the
cultivation of nationalism in many colonial settings. In turn, as Spinelli (2003) argues, public
radio imagines its audience, and how it conceives of the dynamics of the relationship between
its producers and its consumers.
Drawing on Anderson (1983), Friedland (2001) argues that, when assuming an imagined
community perspective, identities are formed from a collective sense of history and culture
that meshes communities together. This has resonance with Levine (2008), who discusses
community in relation to identities associated with music, graphic design, narrative history,
and other forms of culture. According to Levine (2008), people form clusters in communities,
each of which has a distinct character. However, for Friedland (2001), the cognitive, moral,
and imagined aspects of community only cohere within the set of social structures that bind
the community domain. Rose (1990) argues that, although communities may be imagined,
they are not idealist, because such imaginings are grounded in specific social, economic and
political circumstances. In sum then, following Loviglio and Hilmes (2013), radio is still a
medium of local specificity and intimacy, but is increasingly defining its audience not
through geography, but through cultural affinity.
Radio in the digital age
Radio has survived numerous market threats: the phonograph, eight track, tape cassette, and
the compact disc. However, perhaps one of the most significant threats to radio, that has yet
to be resolved today, is the threat that the Internet has introduced (Pluskota, 2015). The
digital transformation of radio began with streaming audio in the late 1990s, highlighted by
the introduction of the iPod in 2001. Fast forward a few years, radio had evolved into
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something different: it was materialised, differentiated, and de-spatialised (Loviglio and
Hilmes, 2013). The debut of podcasting in 2004 combined the mobility of the iPod with
digital syndication software and web-based subscription. With the upsurge of Wifi, the
entrance of the iPhone in 2007, and the rapid proliferation of smartphones, tablets, e-readers
and digital radios, the concept of radio shifted rapidly (Loviglio and Hilmes, 2013). However,
at a time when music, news, and talk can be heard via the Internet, satellite and MP3 sound
files, and films and television programs can be accessed via on-demand technologies, the
future of radio as a distinct medium, and of broadcasting as a technological means, was
considered no longer certain. Hilmes (2013) tells us that, in considering the future of radio,
radio’s death has been predicted as often as its survival. The conclusion that Hilmes (2013)
makes in her chapter on the new materiality of radio is that radio has not only survived, but
revived – both as a creative medium and as a shared cultural experience.
Although the reach of community stations is typically limited, there is increasing recognition
that use of Internet technologies for online simulcasting is expanding this reach, making
content available at the time of broadcast, and afterwards through downloads and podcasts. In
accordance with Coyer (2005), Internet broadcasting offers a redefinition of community
radio, away from geographical restrictions, to transnational broadcasting. As Sujoko
(2011:17) puts it, due to technological advances in mobile phones and the Internet:
Community radio is no longer broadcasting ‘outwards’ and downwards, from a central source of information. Instead, the messages exchanged are multi-sourced, constantly adjusting to and recognising their location(s), and so producing a consistent adaptability and negotiability, even as they rework the existing cultural perspectives of their community.
For certain authors (Algan, 2013; Rooke and Odame, 2013), the Internet holds potential as an
outlet where listeners can learn about, and interact with, station DJs, participate in
competitions, find out about upcoming events, and obtain local news bulletins. Certainly,
internet streaming challenged radio stations to think about the visible face they presented to
the public (Hilmes, 2013). However, the opportunities offered by the Internet, as envisioned
by Sujoko (2011) and Rooke and Odame (2013), have been met with sharp critique. Hallett
and Hintz (2010) argue that community radio’s convergence online has created a widespread
impression that the Internet is a viable alternative for frequency allocation, thus incorrectly
implying that the access problem is solved. For instance, it is assumed that if somebody
listening in a certain location cannot typically access a community radio station via FM, they
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can listen to the radio station online. However, this does not take into consideration factors
such as the digital divide.
To interrogate this further, it is useful to consider Coyer’s (2005) argument that the aspiration
to create a community radio project, as a collective, transcends the technological means of
distribution afforded by the Internet. Therefore, while the Internet has renovated public
access to content, it fails to acknowledge people’s social or political motivations to create
their own media. Coyer (2005:32) believes that “the potential for endless possibilities within
the digital arena cannot serve as a remedy to the issue of scarcity on the traditional dial”.
Whilst the (relatively) limitless space available to broadcast online in some ways addresses
the problem of restrictions, the authors suggests that the Internet has its own limitations,
including the digital divide and community access, arguing that the traditional format of radio
is more intimate, despite there being fewer opportunities for interaction. If Coyer (2005) is
correct, it is questionable whether there is any advantage, bar increased listening figures, to
moving radio online. However, Coyer (2005:40) confesses that even increased listener
figures may be overly presumptuous: “just because something is online doesn’t mean anyone
is listening”. Other authors, too, believe that debates have a myopic focus and question
whether, owing to technological advancements, radio’s locally distinctive identity is being
demolished (e.g. Dunaway, 1998). What is clear is that technology offers us the opportunity
for connecting the radio listener to a community or a geographical space imaginatively and
physically concurrently (Street, 2012). Despite celebrating success for more than a century,
Pluskota (2015) argues that in order to remain competitive, the radio industry must consider
changing its model to one that can compete with other listening options, particularly
regarding listening choices, customisation, and access. Moody (2010) complements yet
extends this viewpoint, believing that if radio is to innovate, it needs to engage with its
origins in audio.
Conclusion
Despite a wide scope of studies looking at radio through a number of different lenses,
including: social, political, and cultural, few studies devote sufficient attention to radio for
what it is, a sonic medium. Peters (2012:1241), discussing pirate radio, considers how radio
DJs on Radio Caroline1 “harnessed” to depth and dynamism of the sea, to create unique audio
experiences for listeners on land. Though not using the lens of sonic geographies explicitly,
1 Radio Caroline is a British radio station founded in 1964 to circumvent record companies’ control of popular music broadcasting in the United Kingdom and the BBC’s radio broadcasting monopoly (see Chapman, 1990).
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Peters (2012:1241) is concerned with the management and manipulations of materiality and
affect, particularly of the rough seas, which helped to form new “cocomposed relations” on
the airwaves. Through strategic acts to ‘play up’ the power of the sea, Radio Caroline
listeners became “seduced by…this motionful, dynamic, and uncertain hydroworld” (Peters,
2012:1249). Also devoting attention to sonic properties is Arkette’s (2004) discussion of the
ways in which different radio stations incorporate diverse modes of presentation. For
instance, Radio 3 demonstrates “presenters, in respectful tones and subdued inflections”
conveying their knowledge of musical artefacts to the listeners (Arkette, 2004:165).
Meanwhile, Jazz FM’s “brand of aural image is centred on the often full-bodied and breathy
voice of the presenter” (Arkette, 2004:165). Contrastingly, Capital and Virgin DJs work
collectively, “talking and cracking jokes amongst themselves in an attempt to dispel the
image of radio as a unilateral disembodied voice” (Arkette, 2004:165). The author calls
listeners to play a part in forming their acoustic communities, rather than considering radio an
ambient landscape.
Certainly, there is demand for heightened scholarly attention to geographies of speech.
Brickell (2013:1), for example, has recently argued that geographers have failed to devote
sustained attention to speech as a practice that “provokes meanings in, and of, spaces”. This
is analogous to Livingstone’s (2007) argument that spaces of speech have been disregarded.
Echoing this is Kanngieser’s (2012) call for a geography of voice and a politics of speaking
and listening, composing a sonic geography of voice, including study of tone and volume,
amongst other qualities. The dominant critical discourse about the radio voice is mostly
aesthetic – a voice is beautiful or ugly, grates or is resonant, has good elocution or poor
(Karpf, 2013). Considering voice in relation to radio is important, for as Street (2012:6) tells
us:
It is a ‘voice’ that can show you pictures. It is this which, if we allow it, can open the world of response before understanding which may be found to be, in the end at the root of all trust understanding after all
Bainbridge and Yates (2013) also recognise that there is more research to be done in
considering radio’s deployment of voice as its predominant means of listener engagement.
Central to this, is to unite radio and sound which have typically, and somewhat bizarrely,
been two separate areas of scholarship (Johnson, 2015). I thus advocate that future studies of
radio should adopt a sonic geographical perspective. This will enable exploration of radio’s
new sounds and forms, which comprise of increasing creativity.
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