As a cultural institution of national and global significance, the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) is notably absent from existing scholarship on the media industries. More importantly, BAFTA's role as an independent arts charity set up by the industry to support and develop new talent is often overlooked. Instead, references to BAFTA made by media and film scholars most frequently take the form of footnotes or digressions that detail particular awards or nominations. Drawing on a range of archival sources, including BAFTA's own records, we address this significant omission within existing scholarship on the British cultural and creative industries. In particular, we examine the period 1947-68, focusing on the 1958 merge...
This article seeks to establish connections between histories of education and media by examining lo...
In the first decade of the new millennium, amidst a commonly accepted “history boom”, over 400 drama...
This thesis explores the expansion of British television in the 1950s and 1960s and its relationship...
As a cultural institution of national and global significance, the British Academy of Film and Telev...
This article identifies and summarises the main findings of the AHRC research project ‘Fifty Years o...
An analysis of the events leading up to the partnership deal between the British Film Institute and ...
This thesis explores approximately two decades in the history of the Society for Education in Film a...
There are few institutions in British history that have had such a massive role in shaping the daily...
This article examines the UK Film Council’s objective to reorganise and reallocate public funding fo...
This one-day conference was organised by CinEcoSA (Cinéma, Économie & Sociétés Anglophones - Cinema,...
From May 2000 until its demise in 2011, the UK Film Council (UKFC) was the main film funding body in...
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the elite world of institutional British science attempted to tak...
The characterisation of the contemporary creative and cultural industries (CCIs) as ‘cool, creative ...
This article seeks to examine the notion of a ‘history boom’ on UK television (TV) during the second...
From the late 1970s on, as competition intensified, British broadcasters searched for new ways to co...
This article seeks to establish connections between histories of education and media by examining lo...
In the first decade of the new millennium, amidst a commonly accepted “history boom”, over 400 drama...
This thesis explores the expansion of British television in the 1950s and 1960s and its relationship...
As a cultural institution of national and global significance, the British Academy of Film and Telev...
This article identifies and summarises the main findings of the AHRC research project ‘Fifty Years o...
An analysis of the events leading up to the partnership deal between the British Film Institute and ...
This thesis explores approximately two decades in the history of the Society for Education in Film a...
There are few institutions in British history that have had such a massive role in shaping the daily...
This article examines the UK Film Council’s objective to reorganise and reallocate public funding fo...
This one-day conference was organised by CinEcoSA (Cinéma, Économie & Sociétés Anglophones - Cinema,...
From May 2000 until its demise in 2011, the UK Film Council (UKFC) was the main film funding body in...
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the elite world of institutional British science attempted to tak...
The characterisation of the contemporary creative and cultural industries (CCIs) as ‘cool, creative ...
This article seeks to examine the notion of a ‘history boom’ on UK television (TV) during the second...
From the late 1970s on, as competition intensified, British broadcasters searched for new ways to co...
This article seeks to establish connections between histories of education and media by examining lo...
In the first decade of the new millennium, amidst a commonly accepted “history boom”, over 400 drama...
This thesis explores the expansion of British television in the 1950s and 1960s and its relationship...