The experiences of women engineers working in the BBC Television Service at Alexandra Palace, London, during the 1940s and 1950s, give insights into gender discrimination in broadcasting. These women first joined as radio engineers when the BBC was recruiting women during World War II, then transferred to television between 1946 and 1947. In interviews recorded in the 1990s, they talk about incidents of bullying and exclusion by men on crews who were hostile to women doing engineering jobs. Other memories are about being demoted from positions on camera and sound to vision mixing when the BBC Staff Association negotiated new grading for cameramen with BBC management at the expense of its female members. As the Television Service became esta...
Women listeners were the key daytime audience for the BBC during the inter-war years. Within months ...
Although there is a body of scholarship concerning women’s roles in the British media industries, fe...
This article examines the case of the Women’s Auxiliary Television Technical Staff (WATTS) of the Ch...
The experiences of women engineers working in the BBC Television Service at Alexandra Palace, London...
Men have long dominated the engineering professions, with women’s lower participation rates often ex...
This is a working paper on women and the early BBC television service, prior to September 1939. It ...
This thesis is a study of women’s employment in the BBC during the 1920s and 1930s and poses the que...
This is a working paper on women and the early BBC television service, prior to September 1939. It c...
From its earliest days in 1923 the BBC employed a sizeable female workforce. The majority were in su...
This article presents a range of hitherto unheard women’s testimonies of their experiences working i...
From its beginnings in 1923, the BBC employed a sizeable female workforce. The majority were in supp...
Between 1926 and 1938, the Foreign Department of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) played a...
This thesis looks at the work of women engineers in the period 1945-2000. Its central focus is the i...
Isa Benzie joined the BBC as a waged secretary in 1927 and was placed in the BBC’s Foreign Departmen...
The BBC’s treatment of female on-screen and -on air talent has come under scrutiny at various points...
Women listeners were the key daytime audience for the BBC during the inter-war years. Within months ...
Although there is a body of scholarship concerning women’s roles in the British media industries, fe...
This article examines the case of the Women’s Auxiliary Television Technical Staff (WATTS) of the Ch...
The experiences of women engineers working in the BBC Television Service at Alexandra Palace, London...
Men have long dominated the engineering professions, with women’s lower participation rates often ex...
This is a working paper on women and the early BBC television service, prior to September 1939. It ...
This thesis is a study of women’s employment in the BBC during the 1920s and 1930s and poses the que...
This is a working paper on women and the early BBC television service, prior to September 1939. It c...
From its earliest days in 1923 the BBC employed a sizeable female workforce. The majority were in su...
This article presents a range of hitherto unheard women’s testimonies of their experiences working i...
From its beginnings in 1923, the BBC employed a sizeable female workforce. The majority were in supp...
Between 1926 and 1938, the Foreign Department of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) played a...
This thesis looks at the work of women engineers in the period 1945-2000. Its central focus is the i...
Isa Benzie joined the BBC as a waged secretary in 1927 and was placed in the BBC’s Foreign Departmen...
The BBC’s treatment of female on-screen and -on air talent has come under scrutiny at various points...
Women listeners were the key daytime audience for the BBC during the inter-war years. Within months ...
Although there is a body of scholarship concerning women’s roles in the British media industries, fe...
This article examines the case of the Women’s Auxiliary Television Technical Staff (WATTS) of the Ch...