Low Power to the People: Pirates, Protest, and Politics in FM Radio Activism
Low Power to the People: Pirates, Protest, and Politics in FM Radio Activism
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Abstract
The United States ushered in a new era of small-scale broadcasting in 2000 when it began issuing low-power FM (LPFM) licenses for noncommercial radio stations around the country. Over the next decade, several hundred of these newly created low-wattage stations took to the airwaves. This book describes the practices of an activist organization focused on LPFM during this era. Despite its origins as a pirate broadcasting collective, the group eventually shifted toward building and expanding regulatory access to new, licensed stations. These radio activists consciously cast radio as an alternative to digital utopianism, promoting an understanding of electronic media that emphasizes the local community rather than a global audience of Internet users. The book focuses on how these radio activists impute emancipatory politics to the “old” medium of radio technology by promoting the idea that “microradio” broadcasting holds the potential to empower ordinary people at the local community level. The group’s methods combine political advocacy with a rare commitment to hands-on technical work with radio hardware, although the activists’ hands-on, inclusive ethos was hampered by persistent issues of race, class, and gender. This study of activism around an “old” medium offers broader lessons about how political beliefs are expressed through engagement with specific technologies.
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Front Matter
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1
Pirates, Hams, and Protest: Radio Activism in Historical Context
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2
Selfhoods: Geeks, Activists, and Countercultures
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3
The Tools of Gender Production
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4
The Work of Pedagogy in Technological Activism
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5
Fine-Tuning Boundaries
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6
Making Old Technology Anew: Reinventing FM Radio in the Twenty-First Century
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7
Do New Media Have Old Politics?
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End Matter
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