Fuller in Conversation with Studs Terkel (1960)
A 58-minute 1960 radio interview of Fuller by the broadcaster Studs Terkel.
This is a recorded radio conversation between the Chicago broadcaster Studs Terkel and Buckminster Fuller, broadcast on April 23, 1960, and running about 58 minutes. In it Terkel interviews Fuller in his dual capacity as author and scientist, discussing his work in an era when geodesic domes had recently brought him wide public attention.
The recording survives as part of the Studs Terkel Radio Archive, a collection managed by WFMT in partnership with the Chicago History Museum, which owns the original tape; digitization was provided in kind by the Library of Congress. The program stands among the archive's science and science-writing interviews, a body that also includes Terkel's conversations with figures such as Bertrand Russell. As a dated primary-source recording of Fuller speaking in his own voice at the outset of the 1960s, it is a useful artifact for study of his mid-career thinking and public persona.
See Also
- R. Buckminster Fuller (R. Buckminster Fuller) — the central figure
- Studs Terkel (Studs Terkel) — the interviewer
Sources
- R. Buckminster (Richard Buckminster) Fuller in conversation with Studs Terkel