In this Book

Nazi Soundscapes: Sound, Technology and Urban Space in Germany, 1933-1945

Book
Carolyn Birdsall
2012
summary
Many images of Nazi propaganda are universally recognizable, and symbolize the ways that the National Socialist party manipulated German citizens. What might an examination of the party’s various uses of sound reveal? In Nazi Soundscapes, Carolyn Birdsall offers an in-depth analysis of the cultural significance of sound and new technologies like radio and loudspeaker systems during the rise of the National Socialist party in the 1920s to the end of World War II. Focusing specifically on the urban soundscape of Düsseldorf, this study examines both the production and reception of sound-based propaganda in the public and private spheres. Birdsall provides a vivid account of sound as a key instrument of social control, exclusion, and violence during Nazi Germany, and she makes a persuasive case for the power of sound within modern urban history.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half-Title Page, Title Page, Copyright

Contents

pp. 5-6

Acknowledgements

pp. 7-8

Abbreviations

pp. 9-10

Introduction

pp. 11-30

1. Affirmative Resonances in Urban Space

pp. 31-64

2. The Festivalisation of the Everyday

pp. 65-102

3. Mobilising Sound for the Nation at War

pp. 103-140

4. Cinema as a Gesamtkunstwerk?

pp. 141-172

Afterword: Echoes of the Past

pp. 173-179

Notes

pp. 180-216

Bibliography

pp. 217-254

Track List

pp. 255-256

Index of Names

pp. 257-260

Index of Subjects

pp. 261-272

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