At the end of the nineteenth century, in the era of the second industrial revolution, falling working hours, rising disposable income, increasing urbanisation, rapidly expanding transport networks and strong population growth resulted in a sharp rise in the demand for entertainment. Initially, the expenditure was spread across different categories, such as live entertainment, sports, music, bowling alleys or skating rinks. One of these categories was cinematographic entertainment, a new service, based on a new technology. Initially it seemed not more than a fad, a novelty shown at fairs, but it quickly emerged as the dominant form of popular entertainment. This paper argues that the take-off of cinema was largely demand-driven, and that, in...
This is the first book in English in nearly half a century to tell the full story of the internation...
This paper examines the effect of a new technology on a labour-intensive service. Comparing primal a...
Defence date: 30 October 2001Examining Board: Prof. Paul Johnson, London School of Economics and Pol...
At the end of the nineteenth century, in the era of the second industrial revolution, falling workin...
This paper investigates the role of consumption in the emergence of the motion picture industry in B...
This paper investigates the role of consumption in the emergence of the motion picture industry in B...
This paper investigates the role of consumption in the emergence of the motion picture industry in B...
Entertainment Industrialised is the first study to compare the emergence and economic development of...
This paper estimates and compares the benefits cinema technology generated to society in Britain, Fr...
Also available in paperback, Cambridge University Press, 2011, ISBN: 9781107403499Entertainment Indu...
Cinema was a product of the second-stage Industrial Revolution. This article examines some aspects o...
Abstract This paper discusses the emergence and growth of various media industries in Britain. It sh...
Cinema as the mass culture art form that we know today began with technological advances in French p...
Motion pictures constituted a revolutionary new technology that transformed entertainment-a rival, l...
This paper examines the effect of a new technology on a labour-intensive service. Comparing primal a...
This is the first book in English in nearly half a century to tell the full story of the internation...
This paper examines the effect of a new technology on a labour-intensive service. Comparing primal a...
Defence date: 30 October 2001Examining Board: Prof. Paul Johnson, London School of Economics and Pol...
At the end of the nineteenth century, in the era of the second industrial revolution, falling workin...
This paper investigates the role of consumption in the emergence of the motion picture industry in B...
This paper investigates the role of consumption in the emergence of the motion picture industry in B...
This paper investigates the role of consumption in the emergence of the motion picture industry in B...
Entertainment Industrialised is the first study to compare the emergence and economic development of...
This paper estimates and compares the benefits cinema technology generated to society in Britain, Fr...
Also available in paperback, Cambridge University Press, 2011, ISBN: 9781107403499Entertainment Indu...
Cinema was a product of the second-stage Industrial Revolution. This article examines some aspects o...
Abstract This paper discusses the emergence and growth of various media industries in Britain. It sh...
Cinema as the mass culture art form that we know today began with technological advances in French p...
Motion pictures constituted a revolutionary new technology that transformed entertainment-a rival, l...
This paper examines the effect of a new technology on a labour-intensive service. Comparing primal a...
This is the first book in English in nearly half a century to tell the full story of the internation...
This paper examines the effect of a new technology on a labour-intensive service. Comparing primal a...
Defence date: 30 October 2001Examining Board: Prof. Paul Johnson, London School of Economics and Pol...