Offers a definitive history of the British and Irish Press from 1900-2017
- Captures the cross-regional and transnational dimension of press history in twentieth-century and at the start of twenty first-century Britain and Ireland
- Offers unique and important reassessments of twentieth-century and contemporary British and Irish press and periodical media within social, cultural, technological, economic and historical contexts
- Provides a timeline of significant events for cross-reference as well as an extensive bibliography for further research
This volume responds to the absence of wide-ranging, up-to-date analysis of newspapers and periodicals across Britain and Ireland in the twentieth century by providing an ambitious, interdisciplinary and research-led volume that seeks to explore long-term continuities and changes.
The Introduction provides an initial overview of the century by studying the evolution of the British and Irish press across five milestone years, and, in particular, examining how the leading titles in the market, the popular daily newspapers, sought to develop their appeal to a broad, mainstream audience. Five core chapters then analyse in more detail the central features of the environment in which the press operated: economic forces and patterns of ownership; the institutions and technologies of production and distribution; the reading audience; the legal and regulatory framework; and the identities and communities that structured the market. Each of the 32 individual chapters has its own specific case study material to exemplify the subject matter of the overall chapter. A timeline of significant events for cross-reference and an extensive bibliography for further research are also included making this a thorough resource for researchers and students alike.
Offers a definitive history of the British and Irish Press from 1900-2017
- Captures the cross-regional and transnational dimension of press history in twentieth-century and at the start of twenty first-century Britain and Ireland
- Offers unique and important reassessments of twentieth-century and contemporary British and Irish press and periodical media within social, cultural, technological, economic and historical contexts
- Provides a timeline of significant events for cross-reference as well as an extensive bibliography for further research
At various points over the last 400 years, key political, economic and social processes, have worked to hinder or promote the expansion and dissemination of information across Britain and Ireland via newspapers and periodicals. In a contemporary era characterized by debate on the limits of devolution and the potential of independence we need to assess the roles played by newspapers and periodicals in enabling national and regional identities to emerge, cohere and diversify over time. How can we best identify the most significant of these processes? What were the critical flashpoints in their development? How have they marked the place of the press in civic society? What are the consequences in considering these within the general history of the British and Irish press? This proposed volume in a three volume series will address these matters, offering a definitive account of newspaper and periodical press activity across Britain and Ireland between 1900 and 2017, and addressing questions related to four key research interests: general social/political history; newspaper and periodical history; cultural history; technological history. A further aim is to situate such discussions within the larger framework of communication and media history.
This volume in offers a definitive account of newspaper and periodical press activity across Britain and Ireland between 1900 and 2017.
Arvustused
This is a breakthrough book which not only harvests a generation of research since the last general anthology but also includes important new work. It will be the first place to turn for anyone who wants to know about the history of the British press since 1900. * James Curran, Goldsmiths, University of London *
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viii | |
| Acknowledgements |
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xv | |
| Contributor Biographies |
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xvii | |
| Preface |
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xxvii | |
| Introduction: Milestones in the History of the Twentieth-Century Press |
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1 | (30) |
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1 Economics: Ownership And Competition |
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31 | (33) |
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64 | (19) |
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83 | (23) |
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106 | (25) |
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5 Identities And Communities: Negotiating Working-Class Identity In The Regional Press |
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131 | (24) |
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6 Transatlantic Exchanges |
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155 | (17) |
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7 Literary And Review Journalism |
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172 | (17) |
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189 | (22) |
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9 Digital News, Digitised News |
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211 | (16) |
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227 | (20) |
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11 News Agencies: From Telegrams To Tweets |
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247 | (18) |
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12 Photography And Illustration |
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265 | (15) |
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280 | (18) |
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14 Women's Magazines: The Pursuit Of Pleasure And Politics |
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298 | (17) |
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315 | (18) |
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16 Shared Media Histories In The British Isles: Irish-Language Media, 1900--2018 |
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333 | (23) |
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356 | (21) |
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18 Continuity And Change In The Belfast Press, 1900-1994 |
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377 | (19) |
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19 The Black British And Irish Press |
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396 | (18) |
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414 | (20) |
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21 Britain's Imperial Press System |
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434 | (17) |
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22 The Entertainment Press |
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451 | (17) |
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23 Feminism And The Feminist Press |
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468 | (15) |
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24 The Lgbtq Press In Twentieth-Century Britain And Ireland |
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483 | (19) |
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25 The Press And The Labour Movement |
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502 | (15) |
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26 The Tabloid Press: Tales Of Controversy, Community And Public Life |
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517 | (21) |
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538 | (18) |
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556 | (18) |
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29 Newspaper Reports Of The Westminster Parliament |
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574 | (19) |
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30 Extra-Parliamentary Reporting: The Under-Reported Life Of The Working Class |
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593 | (19) |
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612 | (14) |
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32 The Metropolitan Press: Connections And Competition Between Britain And Ireland |
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626 | (17) |
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643 | (17) |
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| Concluding Comments |
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660 | (4) |
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| Key Press and Periodical Events Timeline, 1900--2018 |
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664 | (21) |
| Bibliography |
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685 | (58) |
| Index |
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743 | |
Martin Conboy is Professor of Journalism History at the University of Sheffield where he is also the co-director (with Adrian Bingham) of the Centre for the Study of Journalism and History. His work has been funded by the AHRC, the Dutch NWO and Marshs Library in Dublin. He is the author of seven single-authored books on the language and history of journalism as well as co-author and editor of nine more. He is on the editorial boards of Journalism Studies: Media History; Journalism: Theory, Practice and Criticism; and Memory Studies. Adrian Bingham is Professor of Modern British History at the University of Sheffield. He has written widely about the popular press, including Gender, Modernity, and the Popular Press in Inter-War Britain (OUP, 2004), Family Newspapers? Sex, Private Life and the British Popular Press 1918-78 (OUP, 2009), and, with Professor Martin Conboy, Tabloid Century: The Popular Press in Britain, 1896 to the present (Peter Lang, 2015).