
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The 'age of noise': How a preoccupation with unwanted sounds came to characterise modernity. The 20th century saw the expansion of cities and technological change. The sounds of motor cars, vacuum cleaners and gramaphones filled the air, leading social commentators to forecast the end of civilisation and a breakdown in mental health. Did noise provide people with a way of talking about their social anxieties? Does it still serve this function today? Laurie Taylor talks to James Mansell, Assistant Professor of Cultural Studies at the University of Nottingham and Marie Thompson, Lecturer in the School of Film and Media at the University of Lincoln.
By BBC Radio 44.5
294294 ratings
The 'age of noise': How a preoccupation with unwanted sounds came to characterise modernity. The 20th century saw the expansion of cities and technological change. The sounds of motor cars, vacuum cleaners and gramaphones filled the air, leading social commentators to forecast the end of civilisation and a breakdown in mental health. Did noise provide people with a way of talking about their social anxieties? Does it still serve this function today? Laurie Taylor talks to James Mansell, Assistant Professor of Cultural Studies at the University of Nottingham and Marie Thompson, Lecturer in the School of Film and Media at the University of Lincoln.

7,729 Listeners

374 Listeners

886 Listeners

1,072 Listeners

5,543 Listeners

1,798 Listeners

1,880 Listeners

867 Listeners

723 Listeners

306 Listeners

1,754 Listeners

1,028 Listeners

2,097 Listeners

1,921 Listeners

502 Listeners

419 Listeners

63 Listeners

851 Listeners

164 Listeners

81 Listeners

68 Listeners

3,172 Listeners

735 Listeners

1,003 Listeners