
The ten years following the end of the Second World War were critical years in the history of British broadcasting. They witnessed the rise of television and the end of the BBC's monopoly. This fourth volume of Asa Briggs's detailed study is based on a mass of hitherto unexplored documentary evidence, much, but not all of it, from the BBC's own voluminous archives. It examines in detail how and why some of the key decisions affecting broadcasting policy - domestic and external - were reached and what were their effects.Yet it is more than an institutional history. One long chapter deals with the changing arts and techniques of broadcasting news and views, politics, drama, features and variety, music, religion, education and sport. It describes a pattern of broadcasting - and a society and culture - already remote from our own. At every point the main contours of society and culture are explored. It ends with the first night of competitive television and with contemporary assessments of the likely impact of television on sound broadcasting and other media.It is profusely illustrated and can be read either as complete in itself or as one fascinating phase in the unfolding history of British broadcasting.
This volume investigates the critical decade following World War II, focusing on the transformation of British broadcasting through the rise of television and the dissolution of the BBC's monopoly. Asa Briggs, a preeminent historian of the era, utilizes extensive primary source material, including previously restricted BBC archives, to reconstruct the policy decisions that shaped the national media landscape. The work argues that broadcasting policy during this period was inextricably linked to broader shifts in British social and cultural life.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians frequently cite this series as the definitive institutional record of British broadcasting. Readers often note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous and exhaustive account of the period's media evolution.
Page Count:
1028
Publication Date:
1979-03-08
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192129678
ISBN-13:
9780192129673
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