Professor Todd Avery is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, USA.
'Radio Modernism forges new pathways for understanding radio as productive of imagined communities both in and beyond the nation. Pitting the BBC’s foundational policies as a national institution against the diverse voices of numerous modernist broadcasters, Todd Avery provocatively argues that radio’s potential for shaping the public sphere found early expression in conflicting models of culture and community that were fundamentally reflective of differing ethical systems. Bringing together modernism and mass communication, print culture and radio culture, media history and cultural theory, this elegantly written and broadly knowledgeable book will interest a wide range of scholars and general readers alike.' Melba Cuddy-Keane, Professor of English, University of Toronto '...a worthwhile [read], especially for those interested in the genesis of British broadcasting (and how it differed from American) and how British radio affected literary modernism... Recommended.' Choice '... compact but meticulously sourced and argued volume... The arguments and archives at the author's disposal are varied and well searched... Radio modernism's great strategic achievement, and the key to its unusual readability, is this identification of compelling relay stations [...] that send its signal bounding between the familiar surfaces of literary history and technoculturalism, locating a wealth of material to which readers of modernism may well wish - and need - to become attuned.' Woolf Studies Annual ’... stimulating new book... to add a valuable layer to our increasingly complex and nuanced picture of relations between modernity and mass culture.’ Modernism/Modernity