Peace and Power in Cold War Britain explores the ban the bomb and
anti-Vietnam War movements from the perspective of media history,
focusing in particular on the relationship between radicalism and the
rise of television. In doing so, it addresses two questions, both of
which seem to recur with each major breakthrough in communications
technology: what do advances in communications media mean for
democratic participation in politics and how do distinctive types of
media condition the very nature of that participation itself? In
answering these, the book views the ban the bomb and anti-Vietnam War
movements in relation to communication power and media discourse. It
highlights how these movements intersected with parts of public life
that were being transformed by television themselves, shaping
struggles for social change among activists and public intellectuals
on the streets, in the Labour Party and in the law courts. The
significance of this relationship between media and movements was
complex and wide-ranging. Christopher R. Hill demonstrates that it
contributed to the enrichment of democracy in Cold War Britain, with
radicals serving to innovate and pioneer creative forms of political
expression from both in and outside of media organisations. However,
the movements increasingly succumbed to news coverage and values that
revolved around human interest and violence, feeding into the
revolutionary spectacle of 1968 and the turn towards identity
politics.
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Media, Movements and Democracy, c.1945-68
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781474279369
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter