This article explores archaeological programmes on the BBC between 1922 and 1939 through an entangled approach to broadcast and printed talks. Supported by archival sources and programme schedules in The Radio Times and The Listener, it focuses on the intertwined archaeological, broadcasting and publishing careers of Charles Leonard Woolley based on his excavation at Ur in southern Iraq. This highlights the important place archaeology held in the interwar listening and reading market with the BBC offering high fees for a popular speaker. Incorporating periodical studies and aspects of book history demonstrates the importance of an integrated approach to media history to further our understanding of the relationship between media, science an...
The aim of this article is to reflect on the opening of the BBC television service in 1936 and the o...
Several times in the BBC’s history, from the 1920s to the 1960s, scientific organisations (mainly t...
During 1931–1933 several BBC radio broadcasts invited listeners to participate in what would now be ...
The advent of BBC radio broadcasting in 1922 created a new opportunity for communicating archaeology...
This thesis explores how British archaeologists working in Iraq during the interwar period engaged w...
The birth of archaeologically-themed television programmes is intimately linked to the birth of tele...
Sean Street has led three major projects to digitise early commercial radio archives during his time...
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the elite world of institutional British science attempted to tak...
Today, archaeologists are more aware of the importance of the relationship between their work and th...
In 1949, physicist Mark Oliphant criticised the BBC’s handling of science in a letter to the Directo...
PhD ThesisHuman remains are one of the most popular aspects of archaeology for the public in the Uni...
In the early 1960s, the BBC was given the opportunity to demonstrate that it had the skills and reso...
In his numerous writings on archives, technologies, and time media archaeologist Wolfgang Ernst inde...
A number of recent events inside and outside of the heritage sector have triggered a lively and larg...
This thesis recognises the incompleteness of early television history, specifically as it is articu...
The aim of this article is to reflect on the opening of the BBC television service in 1936 and the o...
Several times in the BBC’s history, from the 1920s to the 1960s, scientific organisations (mainly t...
During 1931–1933 several BBC radio broadcasts invited listeners to participate in what would now be ...
The advent of BBC radio broadcasting in 1922 created a new opportunity for communicating archaeology...
This thesis explores how British archaeologists working in Iraq during the interwar period engaged w...
The birth of archaeologically-themed television programmes is intimately linked to the birth of tele...
Sean Street has led three major projects to digitise early commercial radio archives during his time...
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the elite world of institutional British science attempted to tak...
Today, archaeologists are more aware of the importance of the relationship between their work and th...
In 1949, physicist Mark Oliphant criticised the BBC’s handling of science in a letter to the Directo...
PhD ThesisHuman remains are one of the most popular aspects of archaeology for the public in the Uni...
In the early 1960s, the BBC was given the opportunity to demonstrate that it had the skills and reso...
In his numerous writings on archives, technologies, and time media archaeologist Wolfgang Ernst inde...
A number of recent events inside and outside of the heritage sector have triggered a lively and larg...
This thesis recognises the incompleteness of early television history, specifically as it is articu...
The aim of this article is to reflect on the opening of the BBC television service in 1936 and the o...
Several times in the BBC’s history, from the 1920s to the 1960s, scientific organisations (mainly t...
During 1931–1933 several BBC radio broadcasts invited listeners to participate in what would now be ...