Radio Girls(124)



7. Maisie is initially mistrustful of both Hilda and Phyllida—Hilda because she is, as Maisie sees it, a woman in a man’s job; Phyllida because she appears to look down on Maisie. Both these women become her closest friends and allies. How do you think they help her become a stronger, more confident person? Discuss how Maisie’s personality—the wit she’s kept under wraps most of her life—blossoms as a result of her friendships.

8. Many people in 1920s Britain are worried about the effect of technology and media. Mrs. Crewe, Maisie’s landlady, is fearful of the idea of disembodied voices in the house. Are there any parallels to how technology is viewed in society today? How was the radio in its early days similar to the Internet today? How are the privacy concerns similar and different?

9. British women gained the right to vote in 1918, but 1929 marked the first election where all women over twenty-one could vote, irrespective of marital status or property. Two radio programs, Questions for Women Voters and later The Week in Westminster, were specifically designed to help women make informed political decisions. Do you think these programs had an effect upon the political process? Are there similar programs today in any form of media that you think legitimately assists citizens in becoming more active in politics and government?

10. When we first meet Maisie, she claims to be determined to use her job to improve her life and eventually attain the family she’s always dreamed of. Despite her crush on Cyril, she’s very quick to fall in love with her job and devote all her passion to it. Do you think she really wanted to get married at all, or was she just telling herself that because it was what women were expected to want?

11. Several quotes from Hilda’s book Broadcasting appear in the novel. Here is another one: “Broadcasting and other forms of electrical communications have sprung up to meet the urgent requirements of a world which must perish unless it can devise an organization capable of expressing its human and economic unity. The need for rapid interchange of news and views, for familiarizing each country with the ideas and habits of all other countries, and above all the need for an education which may fit men and women, literate and illiterate, for the complicated world of tomorrow—all these needs should find in broadcasting an instrument marvellously fitted to serve them.” What do you think of this thought regarding the nature of broadcasting? Does it have any relevance to today? If so, in what way?

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