Radio and the anti-geopolitical ear: imaginative geographies of a Syrian family's migration to Europe on BBC Radio 4

This paper examines imaginative geographies of forced migration and refugee settlement in a BBC radio series that follows and gives voice to a Syrian family as they journey to Europe. Originally broadcast on BBC Radio 4 between 2015 and 2017, the episodes have since been repackaged as a podcast on B...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Watson, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Taylor and Francis 2023
_version_ 1826312925055287296
author Watson, A
author_facet Watson, A
author_sort Watson, A
collection OXFORD
description This paper examines imaginative geographies of forced migration and refugee settlement in a BBC radio series that follows and gives voice to a Syrian family as they journey to Europe. Originally broadcast on BBC Radio 4 between 2015 and 2017, the episodes have since been repackaged as a podcast on BBC Sounds. The paper answers Horton’s (2019) call for greater engagement with media and popular culture by foregrounding radio as an understudied medium with the capacity to shape listeners’ geographical imaginations. It explores how this series, presented by Manveen Rana, broke new ground through its journalistic-ethnographic form, eyewitness reporting and amplification of refugee voices, and analyses how two imaginative geographies of journey and settlement are constructed through sounds and the spoken word. The paper concludes by theorising radio as a slow medium and demonstrating how Rana’s journalism pushes beyond Toal’s (1996, p. 171) ‘anti-geopolitical eye’ to evidence an anti-geopolitical ear: that is to say, Rana encourages a way of listening to Europe’s migration ‘crisis’ that disrupts discursive framings of refugees as ‘victims’ or ‘threats’ by recasting the family as tangible and relatable human beings. This finding has significant implications for media reporting on migration and scholarship on journalistic storytelling and the construction of geographical imaginations.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T08:08:58Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:00832f47-4cae-4606-94ce-6da7a4df72e9
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-09-25T04:02:54Z
publishDate 2023
publisher Taylor and Francis
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:00832f47-4cae-4606-94ce-6da7a4df72e92024-05-15T09:36:49ZRadio and the anti-geopolitical ear: imaginative geographies of a Syrian family's migration to Europe on BBC Radio 4Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:00832f47-4cae-4606-94ce-6da7a4df72e9EnglishSymplectic ElementsTaylor and Francis2023Watson, AThis paper examines imaginative geographies of forced migration and refugee settlement in a BBC radio series that follows and gives voice to a Syrian family as they journey to Europe. Originally broadcast on BBC Radio 4 between 2015 and 2017, the episodes have since been repackaged as a podcast on BBC Sounds. The paper answers Horton’s (2019) call for greater engagement with media and popular culture by foregrounding radio as an understudied medium with the capacity to shape listeners’ geographical imaginations. It explores how this series, presented by Manveen Rana, broke new ground through its journalistic-ethnographic form, eyewitness reporting and amplification of refugee voices, and analyses how two imaginative geographies of journey and settlement are constructed through sounds and the spoken word. The paper concludes by theorising radio as a slow medium and demonstrating how Rana’s journalism pushes beyond Toal’s (1996, p. 171) ‘anti-geopolitical eye’ to evidence an anti-geopolitical ear: that is to say, Rana encourages a way of listening to Europe’s migration ‘crisis’ that disrupts discursive framings of refugees as ‘victims’ or ‘threats’ by recasting the family as tangible and relatable human beings. This finding has significant implications for media reporting on migration and scholarship on journalistic storytelling and the construction of geographical imaginations.
spellingShingle Watson, A
Radio and the anti-geopolitical ear: imaginative geographies of a Syrian family's migration to Europe on BBC Radio 4
title Radio and the anti-geopolitical ear: imaginative geographies of a Syrian family's migration to Europe on BBC Radio 4
title_full Radio and the anti-geopolitical ear: imaginative geographies of a Syrian family's migration to Europe on BBC Radio 4
title_fullStr Radio and the anti-geopolitical ear: imaginative geographies of a Syrian family's migration to Europe on BBC Radio 4
title_full_unstemmed Radio and the anti-geopolitical ear: imaginative geographies of a Syrian family's migration to Europe on BBC Radio 4
title_short Radio and the anti-geopolitical ear: imaginative geographies of a Syrian family's migration to Europe on BBC Radio 4
title_sort radio and the anti geopolitical ear imaginative geographies of a syrian family s migration to europe on bbc radio 4
work_keys_str_mv AT watsona radioandtheantigeopoliticalearimaginativegeographiesofasyrianfamilysmigrationtoeuropeonbbcradio4