In 2004, I worked as a presenter on a new ABC TV program called Rewind. Produced as part of a special initiative to make programs about Australian history, Rewind used several historians as presenters and promised to tell new stories from Australia’s past. Few historians experience the production processes of television in such a detailed way: the media and the academy are arguably a little suspicious of each other. The experience of working on Rewind was an extraordinary one – both exhilarating and frustrating. In this article, I draw on this experience to explore some of the issues that one faces as a ‘television historian’. How much control were we able to exert over our role and presence in the storytelling process? How were we used in ...
From Ken Burns\u27s documentaries to historical dramas such as Roots, from A&E\u27s Biography series...
This article analyses how the Australian current affairs programme, Four Corners, which follows a st...
This paper draws on the letters and messages and newspaper clipping held by the BBC Written Archives...
In 2004, I worked as a presenter on a new ABC TV program called Rewind. Produced as part of a specia...
After working (mostly) as an academic historian for six years, in 2004 I became a historian-presente...
What appears on screen as `TV history' is limited by a number of possible factors; te...
This chapter reports on eleven interviews with Pro-Am archivists of Australian television which aime...
What appears on screen as `TV history' is limited by a number of possible factors; technological, fi...
From Ken Burns’s documentaries to historical dramas such as Roots, from A&E’s Biography series to CN...
John Hartley uses the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne to discuss the notions of a history of TV and ...
Histories: narratives written by historians.Historians: academically trained specialists researching...
In 2004, the Australian Liberal-National Party Coalition Government promised that, if re-elected, th...
© 2015 Dr. Nigel Alexander DickMany academics have written about television and interest in the medi...
There is a branch of history called archaeology. The source of information that archaeologists value...
Ways of accessing and understanding history have shifted in contemporary society with history being ...
From Ken Burns\u27s documentaries to historical dramas such as Roots, from A&E\u27s Biography series...
This article analyses how the Australian current affairs programme, Four Corners, which follows a st...
This paper draws on the letters and messages and newspaper clipping held by the BBC Written Archives...
In 2004, I worked as a presenter on a new ABC TV program called Rewind. Produced as part of a specia...
After working (mostly) as an academic historian for six years, in 2004 I became a historian-presente...
What appears on screen as `TV history' is limited by a number of possible factors; te...
This chapter reports on eleven interviews with Pro-Am archivists of Australian television which aime...
What appears on screen as `TV history' is limited by a number of possible factors; technological, fi...
From Ken Burns’s documentaries to historical dramas such as Roots, from A&E’s Biography series to CN...
John Hartley uses the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne to discuss the notions of a history of TV and ...
Histories: narratives written by historians.Historians: academically trained specialists researching...
In 2004, the Australian Liberal-National Party Coalition Government promised that, if re-elected, th...
© 2015 Dr. Nigel Alexander DickMany academics have written about television and interest in the medi...
There is a branch of history called archaeology. The source of information that archaeologists value...
Ways of accessing and understanding history have shifted in contemporary society with history being ...
From Ken Burns\u27s documentaries to historical dramas such as Roots, from A&E\u27s Biography series...
This article analyses how the Australian current affairs programme, Four Corners, which follows a st...
This paper draws on the letters and messages and newspaper clipping held by the BBC Written Archives...