The untold story of the talking book / Matthew Rubery.
- Rubery, Matthew
- Date:
- 2016
- Books
About this work
Description
This work traces the tradition from phonographic books made on wax cylinders to talking books made for blinded soldiers returning from the First World War and, much later, the commercial audiobooks heard today. Addressing the vexed relationship between orality and print, the author shows how talking books developed both as a way of reproducing printed books and as a way of overcoming their limitations. In an overview, he charts the talking book's evolution across numerous media (records, tapes, discs, digital files), its reception by a bemused public, and impassioned disputes over its legitimacy. Testimonials drawn from the archives of charities for war-blinded veterans and pioneering audio publishers, including Caedmon, Books on Tape, and Audible, recreate how audiences over the past century have responded to literature read out loud. This book poses a series of conceptual questions too: What exactly is the relationship between spoken and printed texts? How does the experience of listening to books compare to that of reading them? What influence does a book's narrator have over its reception? What methods of close listening are appropriate to such narratives? What new formal possibilities are opened up by sound recording? Sound technology turns out to be every bit as important as screens to the book's ongoing transformation.
Publication/Creation
Physical description
Contributors
Bibliographic information
Contents
Languages
Where to find it
Location Status History of MedicineAC.UOpen shelves
Permanent link
Identifiers
ISBN
- 9780674545441
- 0674545443