During the course of several decades, several scientists and groups of scientists lobbied the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) about science broadcasting. A consistent theme of the interventions was that science broadcasting should be given exceptional treatment both in its content, which was to have a strongly didactic element, and in its managerial arrangements within the BBC. This privileging of science would have amounted to ‘scientific exceptionalism’. The article looks at the nature of this exceptionalism and broadcasters’ responses to it
Mary Adams was a science producer at the BBC from 1930–6. She is shown to have played a crucial role...
The 1950s British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan is reported to have replied to a journalist’s ques...
This thesis addresses contemporary debates in the sociology of science, the sociology of media and t...
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the elite world of institutional British science attempted to tak...
Several times in the BBC's history, from 1928 to around 1963, the world of professional science has ...
Several times in the BBC’s history, from the 1920s to the 1960s, scientific organisations (mainly t...
In 1949, physicist Mark Oliphant criticised the BBC’s handling of science in a letter to the Directo...
The 'social relations of science' movement grew to prominence in the 1930s. Its story has been told ...
During 1931–1933 several BBC radio broadcasts invited listeners to participate in what would now be ...
In the spring of 1931, the BBC broadcast a short series of talks entitled ‘Science in the Making’. S...
This article comprises two distinct parts. The first surveys the problems and aspirations associated...
During 1949, Joe Trenaman in the BBC’s Further Education Department conducted an experiment into lis...
Longitudinal content analyses of Science coverage in the media are expensive, laborious and therefor...
Journalism and science are two vocational occupations with roots deep in the momentous developments ...
The biggest stories of our age are based on science: global warming, abortion term limits, even the ...
Mary Adams was a science producer at the BBC from 1930–6. She is shown to have played a crucial role...
The 1950s British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan is reported to have replied to a journalist’s ques...
This thesis addresses contemporary debates in the sociology of science, the sociology of media and t...
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the elite world of institutional British science attempted to tak...
Several times in the BBC's history, from 1928 to around 1963, the world of professional science has ...
Several times in the BBC’s history, from the 1920s to the 1960s, scientific organisations (mainly t...
In 1949, physicist Mark Oliphant criticised the BBC’s handling of science in a letter to the Directo...
The 'social relations of science' movement grew to prominence in the 1930s. Its story has been told ...
During 1931–1933 several BBC radio broadcasts invited listeners to participate in what would now be ...
In the spring of 1931, the BBC broadcast a short series of talks entitled ‘Science in the Making’. S...
This article comprises two distinct parts. The first surveys the problems and aspirations associated...
During 1949, Joe Trenaman in the BBC’s Further Education Department conducted an experiment into lis...
Longitudinal content analyses of Science coverage in the media are expensive, laborious and therefor...
Journalism and science are two vocational occupations with roots deep in the momentous developments ...
The biggest stories of our age are based on science: global warming, abortion term limits, even the ...
Mary Adams was a science producer at the BBC from 1930–6. She is shown to have played a crucial role...
The 1950s British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan is reported to have replied to a journalist’s ques...
This thesis addresses contemporary debates in the sociology of science, the sociology of media and t...