
This is the second part of a projected four-volume history of broadcasting in the United Kingdom.This volume covers the period from the beginning of 1927, when the BBC ceased to be a private company and became a public corporation, up to the outbreak of war in 1939. The acceptance of wireless as a part of the homely background of life and the acceptance of the BBC as the `natural' institution for controlling it distinguish this period from that covered in the earlier volume. From 1927 to 1939 the system of public control which had evolved from the early struggles was never seriously in jeopardy and the one big official inquiry, the Ullswater Report, favoured no major constitutional changes. The main theme of the second volume, therefore, may be called the extension and the enrichment of the activity of broadcasting. Different chapters deal with the programmes and programme-makers; the listeners and the ways in which their needs were (or were not) met as the system expanded; public attitudes to the BBC and the increasing complexity of its control and organization; the coming of television and the early experiments of Baird and others; and the retirement of Sir John Reith - not only the end of a regime but the end of an era. The volume ends with preparations for war.
This volume investigates the institutional and cultural evolution of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) during its transition from a private company to a public corporation between 1927 and 1939. Asa Briggs, a preeminent historian of British media, utilizes extensive archival records and internal BBC documentation to analyze the stabilization of public service broadcasting. The work argues that this era established the BBC as a foundational national institution, characterized by the expansion of programming and the formalization of administrative control prior to the onset of World War II.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and media historians regard this series as the definitive, foundational record of British broadcasting history. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a comprehensive and meticulous account of the BBC's formative years.
Page Count:
672
Publication Date:
1995-05-25
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192129309
ISBN-13:
9780192129307
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