Difference between revisions of "Teresa Winter's thesis"

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&ldquo;This thesis explores the electronic music and sound created by Delia Derbyshire in the BBC’s Radiophonic Workshop between 1962 and 1973.&rdquo;<ref name=etheses/>
 
&ldquo;This thesis explores the electronic music and sound created by Delia Derbyshire in the BBC’s Radiophonic Workshop between 1962 and 1973.&rdquo;<ref name=etheses/>
 
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=Credits=
 
While the thesis has more references per word than even the WikiDelia but it takes Teresa until note 83 on page 26 to include a terse footnote "Guy, ''Wikidelia''" and it is not until note 710 on page 164 that I become "Guy, Martin, ''[[A Game of Chess]]'', ''wikidelia''". That's it.
 
 
It is inconcievable that anyone would write a PhD thesis about Delia without leaning heavily on the WikiDelia as proved by the plethora of quotes lifted from it and most of the references.  Warned my Mark Ayres that I am "dangerous", and threatened by David Butler not to have anything to do with me, she never contacted me while researching her thesis, lifting the research quietly from here like a schoolgirl doing her homework by copying articles from Wikipedia.
 
  
 
=Availability=
 
=Availability=

Revision as of 03:51, 19 July 2016

Teresa Winter's 2015 PhD thesis was entitled Delia Derbyshire: Sound and Music for the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, 1962-1973.[1]

Abstract

“This thesis explores the electronic music and sound created by Delia Derbyshire in the BBC’s Radiophonic Workshop between 1962 and 1973.”[1]

Availability

  • Available under a Creative Commons licence for free dowload. Yay!

References