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dc.contributor.authorShragge, Ulrika
dc.date.accessioned2023-06-08T21:57:12Z
dc.date.available2023-06-08T21:57:12Z
dc.date.issued2023-05-19
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.tcu.edu/handle/116099117/59412
dc.description.abstractThis project follows the beginning years of the prison radio show, Thirty Minutes Behind the Walls. The show originated in Texas and aired mainly out of the Huntsville Unit from 1938 to the late 1950s. Through an analysis of the available transcripts and the recordings taken by the father-and-son duo, Alan and John Lomax, I address the show's current historiography. I argue that the existing scholarship takes an unfairly presentist interpretation and cheats the show out of what I further argue is a pioneering in authentically diversified casting and performance. Given its existence in the midst of Jim Crow Texas, there are expected and realized shortcomings. I carefully avoid the anachronistic judgments made on the show by its two major accounts, and instead approach it on its own terms.
dc.subjectPrison
dc.subjectHuntsville
dc.subjectTexas
dc.subjectRadio
dc.subjectThirty Minutes Behind the Walls
dc.titleStars Behind Bars: Hard Time and Good Times on Texas Prison Radio
etd.degree.departmentHistory
local.departmentHistory


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