La dimension vocale de la propagande
The vocal dimension of propaganda The visual aspect of the propaganda films, the manipulation produced by montage, dramaturgy and the specific relation between the text of the comments and presented images attracted comprehensibly much more attention than the voice used in the war propaganda films....
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Conserveries Mémorielles
2020-09-01
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Series: | Conserveries Mémorielles : Revue Transdisciplinaire de Jeunes Chercheurs |
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Online Access: | http://journals.openedition.org/cm/4562 |
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doaj-791440783caf42c785ec13b9b81b80d72020-11-25T03:59:04ZdeuConserveries MémoriellesConserveries Mémorielles : Revue Transdisciplinaire de Jeunes Chercheurs1718-55562020-09-01La dimension vocale de la propagandeOksana BulgakowaThe vocal dimension of propaganda The visual aspect of the propaganda films, the manipulation produced by montage, dramaturgy and the specific relation between the text of the comments and presented images attracted comprehensibly much more attention than the voice used in the war propaganda films. The recent historiography approaches the exam of the “vocal mechanisms” of indoctrination in the public sphere and the history of the national voice politics. This article contextualizes Soviet voices of some War Propaganda Films, the “disembodied voice of Soviet history”, situated at the intersection of the political, ideological, cultural and biological models. This article situates the voices of the speakers in the vocal landscape in the Soviet Union of this time as represented by the public voice of political figures and the professional voice of radio announcers and film actors. The binary opposition of public (pathetic, loud) vs. private (intimate, confiding, quiet) voices was very controversial during this period. The complexity of the Soviet vocal landscape of the propaganda can be understood and illuminated through a juxtaposition and comparison to the German strategies of vocal indoctrination or the American cultural politics of the voice.http://journals.openedition.org/cm/4562sound propagandavoice of authoritarian and democratic powerradio listeningtechnology of recordingradio speakersvoice over in documentary films and newsreels |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
deu |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Oksana Bulgakowa |
spellingShingle |
Oksana Bulgakowa La dimension vocale de la propagande Conserveries Mémorielles : Revue Transdisciplinaire de Jeunes Chercheurs sound propaganda voice of authoritarian and democratic power radio listening technology of recording radio speakers voice over in documentary films and newsreels |
author_facet |
Oksana Bulgakowa |
author_sort |
Oksana Bulgakowa |
title |
La dimension vocale de la propagande |
title_short |
La dimension vocale de la propagande |
title_full |
La dimension vocale de la propagande |
title_fullStr |
La dimension vocale de la propagande |
title_full_unstemmed |
La dimension vocale de la propagande |
title_sort |
la dimension vocale de la propagande |
publisher |
Conserveries Mémorielles |
series |
Conserveries Mémorielles : Revue Transdisciplinaire de Jeunes Chercheurs |
issn |
1718-5556 |
publishDate |
2020-09-01 |
description |
The vocal dimension of propaganda The visual aspect of the propaganda films, the manipulation produced by montage, dramaturgy and the specific relation between the text of the comments and presented images attracted comprehensibly much more attention than the voice used in the war propaganda films. The recent historiography approaches the exam of the “vocal mechanisms” of indoctrination in the public sphere and the history of the national voice politics. This article contextualizes Soviet voices of some War Propaganda Films, the “disembodied voice of Soviet history”, situated at the intersection of the political, ideological, cultural and biological models. This article situates the voices of the speakers in the vocal landscape in the Soviet Union of this time as represented by the public voice of political figures and the professional voice of radio announcers and film actors. The binary opposition of public (pathetic, loud) vs. private (intimate, confiding, quiet) voices was very controversial during this period. The complexity of the Soviet vocal landscape of the propaganda can be understood and illuminated through a juxtaposition and comparison to the German strategies of vocal indoctrination or the American cultural politics of the voice. |
topic |
sound propaganda voice of authoritarian and democratic power radio listening technology of recording radio speakers voice over in documentary films and newsreels |
url |
http://journals.openedition.org/cm/4562 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT oksanabulgakowa ladimensionvocaledelapropagande |
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