Broadcasting the ‘(anti)colonial sublime’: Radio SEAC, Congress Radio, and the Second World War in South Asia

IF 1 2区 社会学 Q2 AREA STUDIES Modern Asian Studies Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1017/s0026749x2200049x
Isabel Huacuja Alonso
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Abstract

Abstract This article considers the Second World War’s effects on radio infrastructures and listening cultures in India through a detailed analysis of two radio stations: Radio SEAC and Congress Radio. Radio SEAC was a military radio station based in Ceylon targeting British soldiers stationed in Asia. It housed what was then one of the most wide-reaching transmitters. Congress Radio was a makeshift station in Bombay run by young and largely unknown anticolonial activists. While operating on vastly different scales and with rival goals, these stations’ political ambitions were surprisingly similar. Radio SEAC sought to restore confidence in the empire by invoking an old device of imperialism: what Brian Larkin calls the ‘colonial sublime’, the use of ‘technology to represent an overwhelming sense of grandeur’. Radio SEAC’s colonial sublime, however, was not aimed at colonized populations, but at disillusioned British soldiers, whose faith in the empire the station wished to revive. Congress Radio, in contrast, sought to summon what I call the ‘anticolonial sublime’ by deploying the aura of imperial technology against British rulers. Yet, whereas the colonial sublime required technologies to work smoothly, the anticolonial sublime did not. Congress radio broadcasters celebrated their station’s faulty reception, nurturing an aesthetic of rebelliousness. Analysing these two radio projects together, the article traces how the war shaped technological infrastructures while challenging conventional understandings about how radio connects with audiences. British administrators, like anticolonial activists, sought to bring about change less through programming content than through the aura of technological prowess they hoped their stations would generate.
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广播“(反)殖民崇高”:SEAC电台、国会电台和南亚的第二次世界大战
本文通过对SEAC电台和国会电台这两个广播电台的详细分析,考虑了第二次世界大战对印度无线电基础设施和收听文化的影响。SEAC电台是一个设在锡兰的军事广播电台,目标是驻扎在亚洲的英国士兵。它安置了当时最广泛的发射机之一。国会电台是孟买的一个临时电台,由年轻的、基本上不知名的反殖民活动人士经营。尽管这些电台的运作规模大不相同,目标也相互竞争,但它们的政治抱负却惊人地相似。SEAC电台试图通过援引帝国主义的一种古老手段来恢复人们对帝国的信心:布赖恩·拉金(Brian Larkin)称之为“殖民崇高”,即使用“技术来表现一种压倒性的宏伟感”。然而,SEAC电台的殖民崇高不是针对殖民地居民的,而是针对幻想破灭的英国士兵的,他们希望电台能重振对帝国的信心。相比之下,国会电台试图通过利用帝国技术的光环来对抗英国统治者,从而唤起我所说的“反殖民主义的崇高”。然而,尽管殖民主义的崇高需要技术来顺利运作,反殖民主义的崇高却没有。国会广播电台的广播员们庆祝他们电台的错误接收,培养一种叛逆的审美。文章对这两个广播项目进行了分析,追溯了战争如何塑造了技术基础设施,同时挑战了关于广播如何与听众联系的传统理解。与反殖民活动人士一样,英国的行政官员希望通过他们的电台产生的技术实力的光环,而不是通过节目内容来实现变革。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Modern Asian Studies
Modern Asian Studies AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
11.10%
发文量
63
期刊介绍: Modern Asian Studies promotes original, innovative and rigorous research on the history, sociology, economics and culture of modern Asia. Covering South Asia, South-East Asia, China, Japan and Korea, the journal is published in six parts each year. It welcomes articles which deploy inter-disciplinary and comparative research methods. Modern Asian Studies specialises in the publication of longer monographic essays based on path-breaking new research; it also carries substantial synoptic essays which illuminate the state of the broad field in fresh ways. It contains a book review section which offers detailed analysis of important new publications in the field.
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