
New Books Network Podcast Intellectuals Panel #2 with Ellen Horne, Chenjerai Kumanyika, Barry Lam, and Julia Barton
Mar 13, 2026
Barry Lam, philosophy professor and Hi-Phi Nation creator, Chenjerai Kumanyika, audio scholar who interrogates American myths, and Julia Barton, award-winning narrative audio editor, discuss adapting academic work for audio. They talk craft and editing for the ear, balancing story with ideas, using sound and reenactment, building emotional momentum, and practical production and funding challenges.
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Podcasting As A Form Of Scholarship
- Producing narrative audio is a form of epistemology: the iterative processes of revision and fact‑checking change knowledge production.
- Chenjerai Kumanyika contrasts slow peer review with radio's intense revision and feedback loops.
Philosopher Teaching Himself Podcast Craft
- Barry Lam moved from peer‑review journals to making Hi-Phi Nation to escape academic isolation and find a new voice.
- He taught himself production, made a first season, then sought colleagues for feedback and development.
Voice Authenticity Is A Historical Construction
- The 'authentic' podcast voice is constructed and historically biased; early radio tech prioritized male frequencies, disadvantaging women and nonstandard voices.
- Julia Barton cites Tina Tallon's research on microphone design shaping who 'sounded normal' on radio.

