
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


'Do I talk into this thing?' These were the first words ever broadcast live, albeit inadvertently, by Mohandas Gandhi ahead of his speech to the USA. The year was 1931 and the location, London. Gandhi was in town as the sole representative of the Indian National Congress to attend the Second Round Table Conference. He was just weeks shy of his 62nd birthday. This episode adapted from a BIC Streams session with Chandrika Kaul in conversation with Jawhar Sircar focussed on Gandhi and radio, a subject that has been curiously neglected, both in studies of Gandhi and of broadcasting. Gandhi's engagement with radio, the circumstances surrounding his broadcasts, and his interaction with broadcasters, were analysed to help situate the medium within the Mahatma's media repertoire and evaluated its impact.
Dr Chandrika Kaul, is Reader in Modern History at the University of St Andrews, Scotland, U.K.
Jawhar Sircar retired in 2012, after four decades in the IAS — as India's longest serving Culture Secretary. He was immediately appointed CEO of Prasar Bharati in charge of All India Radio & Doordarshan for five years.
By Bangalore International Centre4.5
1010 ratings
'Do I talk into this thing?' These were the first words ever broadcast live, albeit inadvertently, by Mohandas Gandhi ahead of his speech to the USA. The year was 1931 and the location, London. Gandhi was in town as the sole representative of the Indian National Congress to attend the Second Round Table Conference. He was just weeks shy of his 62nd birthday. This episode adapted from a BIC Streams session with Chandrika Kaul in conversation with Jawhar Sircar focussed on Gandhi and radio, a subject that has been curiously neglected, both in studies of Gandhi and of broadcasting. Gandhi's engagement with radio, the circumstances surrounding his broadcasts, and his interaction with broadcasters, were analysed to help situate the medium within the Mahatma's media repertoire and evaluated its impact.
Dr Chandrika Kaul, is Reader in Modern History at the University of St Andrews, Scotland, U.K.
Jawhar Sircar retired in 2012, after four decades in the IAS — as India's longest serving Culture Secretary. He was immediately appointed CEO of Prasar Bharati in charge of All India Radio & Doordarshan for five years.

90,894 Listeners

43,819 Listeners

6,787 Listeners

26,225 Listeners

4,153 Listeners

157 Listeners

57 Listeners

3,188 Listeners

88 Listeners

40 Listeners

106 Listeners

14 Listeners

2,462 Listeners

661 Listeners

14 Listeners