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Recorded Sound Section--Motion Picture, Broadcasting and Recorded Sound Division

INTRODUCTION

USING THE COLLECTIONS

SELECTED COLLECTIONS
arrow graphicRadio
Women on the Radio
Beyond the Microphone
Daytime Programming
World War II
NBC Radio Collection
Programs for and by Women
Meet the Press Collection
NPR Collection
WOR Collection
Pacifica Radio Archive
CBS Collection
AFRTS Collection
Women on AFRS
OWI Collection
VOA Collection
BBC Sound Archive Collection
Music Recordings
Drama and Literature Recordings
The Spoken Word

CONCLUSION

RECORDED SOUND EXTERNAL SITES

VISIT/CONTACT

Radio: An Introduction

The Library of Congress holds the largest and most important collection of radio broadcasts in the United States. Spanning the mid-1920s through the present day, these broadcasts include all types of radio genres—comedy, drama, public affairs, propaganda, interviews, news, and musical variety. Among more than five hundred thousand radio programs are many containing information about American women's history and culture. The radio collection comprises many “special collections”—donations from radio networks, performers, writers, and producers. The two largest collections are the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) Collection and the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS) Collection. Dozens of collections are devoted to a single performer—often donated by that performer—or a particular company. Broadcasts by Arthur Godfrey and singer Jessica Dragonette (1910-1980), soap operas and variety programs sponsored by General Foods Corporation, and programs by interviewer Larry King are among these broadcasts. Others concern anthropologist Margaret Mead (1901-1978), the poetry and literature series New Letters on the Air, the Original Amateur Hour, Phil and Evelyn Spitalny's All-Girl Orchestra, and soprano Helen Traubel (1899-1972). These radio broadcasts, which offer several different paths for studying American women, are a largely underused resource.

Researching Radio

The great depth and breadth of the Library's radio holdings allow us to observe evolving societal attitudes toward women and assumptions about them. To use the division's radio collections for such research, you should consult primary and secondary sources in other divisions for topics and programs of interest; then you can search the Library and divisional catalogs described earlier to locate programs held by the Library.

Although it is impossible to cover all of the radio collections in this site, a few of the largest collections are described here in terms of content, cataloging, and access. Reference staff members can assist you in finding and examining smaller radio collections.

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