- Environmental Sciences - 19:00
Intel invests in UK institute to create Global Centre for Research in Sustainable Connected Cities - Literature - 18:00
Queen Victoria's personal journals put online - Literature - 17:00
Boat Race bragging rights remain with Manchester - Life Sciences - 17:00
Team off to the Far East - Business - 16:00
Engineering a better society - Medicine - 13:00
Stopping drug- induced liver injury - History - 11:00
Aung San Suu Kyi to be awarded honorary degree - Business - 11:00
Holidays inspire disadvantaged children to learn, says study - Life Sciences - 10:00
Think big, think seahorse - History - 10:00
Everything, everywhere, ever’ – a new door opens on the history of humanity - Business - May 23
Supercomputing set to boost region’s competitiveness - Medicine - May 23
’How- to’ video tutorials could boost hearing aid use, say researchers
By category
Official EventAdministration
Chemistry
Physics
Environmental Sciences
Earth Sciences
Life Sciences
Medicine
Business
Literature
History
Pedagogy
Social Sciences
» » more
TV historian gives first Mass Observation anniversary lecture
4 October 2011 - SUSSEX

Juliet Gardiner
TV historian gives first Mass Observation anniversary lecture
A series of five lectures to celebrate Mass Observation’s 75th anniversary begins this month with a talk by social historian and best-selling author Juliet Gardiner.
In ’Writing the mid century with Mass Observation’, to be held in the Fulton Lecture Theatre on Wednesday 12 October (6.30pm), Juliet will be exploring the intention behind what has become one of the most fascinating repositories of information about the lives of ordinary people.
Juliet, whose recent books include The Thirties: An intimate history (2010) and The Blitz: The British under attack (2010), first used the archives in the 1980s to research the Home Front.
She was fascinated by the project begun by Charles Madge, Humphrey Jennings and Tom Harrisson. Their intense curiosity about the mass of people - and more than 70 per cent of the population were working class when Mo was started - led to the unique documentation of people’s lifestyles, from how long they took to drink a pint of beer to what they had on their mantelpieces.
"What interests me is how this anthropological material would be used," she says. "Several books were published and more were planned, but did the Mass-Observers hope that their findings might influence government policy‘ Or was there a danger that with so much and such disparate material, it might end up in shoeboxes’
"Could they have had any idea how invaluable the material they were gathering would be to future historians?"
Juliet, who has appeared on and been the consultant for numerous television programmes, including the adaptation of Ian McEwan’s novel Atonement and BBC One’s ’Turn Back Time, The High Street’, found the archive invaluable for the five books she has written about the Home Front.
"This was when the archive really came into its own," she says. "Ordinary people were given a voice. As a historian it is always a challenge how much you can generalise from the particular. Mass Observation is brilliant in how it helps to do that, in how you can get the mood of the country."
And she is pleased to see that the appetite for uncovering social history continues, not just with MO but through the multitude of television programmes looking at everything from home movies to parish records. "Television has become much better at sourcing materials - and at presenting these sources in an original way."
The next lecture in the series will be given by Sussex author Virginia Nicholson on 8 December. Her book, Millions Like Us: Women’s lives in war and peace 1939-1949 tracked the hopes and fears of Mass Observation diarists during the war years. In her lecture she will explain how the archive enabled her to "eavesdrop" on the innermost thoughts of such ordinary women.
The archive is a charitable trust in the care of the University of Sussex and is housed in the Library. about the lecture series and Mass Observation
University of Sussex, Sussex House, Brighton, BN1 9RH, United Kingdom. ( map )
T: +44 (0)1273 606755
"This was when the archive really came into its own," she says. "Ordinary people were given a voice. As a historian it is always a challenge how much you can generalise from the particular. Mass Observation is brilliant in how it helps to do that, in how you can get the mood of the country."
And she is pleased to see that the appetite for uncovering social history continues, not just with MO but through the multitude of television programmes looking at everything from home movies to parish records. "Television has become much better at sourcing materials - and at presenting these sources in an original way."
The next lecture in the series will be given by Sussex author Virginia Nicholson on 8 December. Her book, Millions Like Us: Women’s lives in war and peace 1939-1949 tracked the hopes and fears of Mass Observation diarists during the war years. In her lecture she will explain how the archive enabled her to "eavesdrop" on the innermost thoughts of such ordinary women.
The archive is a charitable trust in the care of the University of Sussex and is housed in the Library. about the lecture series and Mass Observation
University of Sussex, Sussex House, Brighton, BN1 9RH, United Kingdom. ( map )
T: +44 (0)1273 606755
Links
University of SussexLast job offers
- Law - 21.5
Doctoral Programme at the Law School of the University of Basel - Life Sciences - 19.4
Senior Expert - Genetic Biomarker Oncology (PhD) m/f - Literature - 23.5
Research Fellow (Australia) - Environmental Sciences - 23.5
Coordinator of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Food and Agriculture for Development / Policy Research... - Life Sciences - 23.5
Research Fellow 47469 - Life Sciences - 22.5
Post-doctoral Research Fellow - Physics - 21.5
Postdoctoral Research Associate : GAIA Project - Life Sciences - 18.5
Postdoctoral Research Assistant








» Share this page: