This article considers the responses of women, many of whom describe themselves as housewives, in the 1949 Mass Observation Television Directive, in order to interrogate some of the broader assumptions around television's relationship with the housewife as key to its success. Against the backcloth of social histories revising ideas about gender, modernity and suburbia in the post-war period, this article considers some of the ways in which initial reluctance towards television was recorded and negotiated. It presents three themes around tensions between home and leisure, the domestication of entertainment and going out, and the appreciation of particular genre, which suggest that the adoption of television as mass entertainment by women mig...
This Screen dossier brings together contributions from a number of scholars, who reflect here on the...
Television for Women brings together emerging and established scholars to reconsider the question of...
This article examines the case of the Women’s Auxiliary Television Technical Staff (WATTS) of the Ch...
This article considers the responses of women, many of whom describe themselves as housewives, in th...
This article considers the responses of women, many of whom describe themselves as housewives, in th...
This article analyses (broadly lower middle-class) women’s responses to the arrival of commercial te...
This article analyses (broadly lower middle-class) women’s responses to the arrival of commercial te...
This thesis examines how the television set was domesticated in Britain, from the beginning of the t...
The parallel histories of the establishment of regional television news and the changing patterns of...
In this essay we wish to trouble a received history of popular cultural narratives about women’s liv...
The 1950s in the United States of America brought about not only political, economic and cultural ch...
The television revolution: television as a domestic object in socialist Eastern Europ
This thesis examines how the television set was domesticated in Britain, from the beginning of the t...
Regarding the importance of representation in redefining individuals and social groups’ identity, th...
Drawing on research and evidence surrounding the housewife figure of the 1940s and 1950s, Johnson an...
This Screen dossier brings together contributions from a number of scholars, who reflect here on the...
Television for Women brings together emerging and established scholars to reconsider the question of...
This article examines the case of the Women’s Auxiliary Television Technical Staff (WATTS) of the Ch...
This article considers the responses of women, many of whom describe themselves as housewives, in th...
This article considers the responses of women, many of whom describe themselves as housewives, in th...
This article analyses (broadly lower middle-class) women’s responses to the arrival of commercial te...
This article analyses (broadly lower middle-class) women’s responses to the arrival of commercial te...
This thesis examines how the television set was domesticated in Britain, from the beginning of the t...
The parallel histories of the establishment of regional television news and the changing patterns of...
In this essay we wish to trouble a received history of popular cultural narratives about women’s liv...
The 1950s in the United States of America brought about not only political, economic and cultural ch...
The television revolution: television as a domestic object in socialist Eastern Europ
This thesis examines how the television set was domesticated in Britain, from the beginning of the t...
Regarding the importance of representation in redefining individuals and social groups’ identity, th...
Drawing on research and evidence surrounding the housewife figure of the 1940s and 1950s, Johnson an...
This Screen dossier brings together contributions from a number of scholars, who reflect here on the...
Television for Women brings together emerging and established scholars to reconsider the question of...
This article examines the case of the Women’s Auxiliary Television Technical Staff (WATTS) of the Ch...