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The Battle of the Bard

Shakespeare on US Radio in 1937

Michael P Jensen author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Arc Humanities Press

Published:18th Dec '18

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Battle of the Bard cover

Difficult as it is to imagine today, in 1937 America’s two leading media companies fought over which had the better claim to Shakespeare. The Battle of the Bard explores this episode in US cultural history when NBC and CBS competed to perform Shakespeare for an American audience in a low-risk setting that they hoped would bring prestige to their networks. The resulting fourteen broadcasts are among the more remarkable recreations of Shakespeare of their time. This lively and engaging book shows the cultural dominance of radio at the time, and tells the story of why the networks each wanted to lord Shakespeare’s prestige over the other, how they put their series together, the critical reception, and the cultural impact and legacies of the broadcasts.

One of the most useful and entertaining books I have ever read on Shakespeare's theatrical history. - Prof. Grace Tiffany, Western Michigan University[-][-]"Who owns Shakespeare? Most of us would say we all do but, in 1937, NBC and CBS fought it out as to the rights to argue that Shakespeare was their domain. Michael P. Jensen has brought back to life this extraordinary and almost completely forgotten Battle for the Bard on the radio with superb research and an engaging style that takes us right into the heart of the firstmass medium and its astonishing popularity in the 1930s as well as the networks' competing claims for the cultural high ground of owning Shakespeare. More than simply a study of Shakespeare on radio, this study speaks of the ways in which U.S. mass-media, then and now, negotiate with prestige culture." - Prof. Peter Holland, University of Notre Dame

ISBN: 9781641890779

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

101 pages

New edition