Revisiting Transnational Broadcasting The BBC's foreign-language services during the Second World War
Coordonnateurs : Ribeiro Nelson, Seul Stephanie
Presenting a collection of original chapters, this book reassesses the history of the BBC foreign-language services prior to, and during, the Second World War. The communication between the British government and foreign publics by way of mass media constituted a fundamental, if often ignored, aspect of Britain?s international relations. From the 1930s onwards, transnational broadcasting ? that is, broadcasting across national borders ? became a major element in the conduct of Britain?s diplomacy, and the BBC was employed by the government to further its diplomatic, strategic, and economic interests in times of rising international tension and conflict.
The contributions to this volume display a series of case studies of BBC transmissions in various European foreign languages directed to occupied, neutral, and enemy countries. This allows for a comprehensive understanding of the different broadcasting strategies adopted by the BBC in the late 1930s and throughout the war, when the Corporation was under the direction of the Ministry of Information and the Political Warfare Executive. This book was originally published as a special issue of Media History.
Introduction – Revisiting Transnational Broadcasting: The BBC’s Foreign-Language Services During the Second World War1. ‘Plain, Unvarnished News’? The BBC German Service and Chamberlain’s Propaganda Campaign Directed at Nazi Germany, 1938-1940 2. BBC Portuguese Service During World War II: Praising Salazar While Defending the Allies3. Pawns in a Chess Game: The BBC Spanish Service During the Second World War4. Our Enemy’s Enemy: Selling Britain to Occupied France on the BBC French Service5. Repatriated Germans and ‘British Spirit’: The Transfer of Public Service Broadcasting to Northern Post-War Germany (1945-1950)6. The BBC Polish Service During the Second World War7. Broadcasting by the Czechoslovak Exile Government in London, 1939-1945
Nelson Ribeiro is an Assistant Professor at the Catholic University of Portugal in Lisbon, where he is the Coordinator for Communication Studies. He is a member of the Board at the Research Centre for Communication & Culture, and vice-chair of the Communication History Section at ECREA.
Stephanie Seul is Lecturer in Media History in the Department of Cultural Studies at the University of Bremen, Germany, and a member of the editorial board of Media History.
Date de parution : 01-2019
17.4x24.6 cm
Date de parution : 09-2016
17.4x24.6 cm
Thème de Revisiting Transnational Broadcasting :
Mots-clés :
BBC German Service; communication history; Political Warfare Executive; media history; BBC European Service; broadcasting; Foreign Language Services; Second World War; World War; war and media; BBC Write Archive Centre; history of the BBC; Foreign Office; BBC; British Propaganda; transnational media; BBC Overseas Service; public diplomacy; Foreign Language Broadcasts; propaganda; West Germany; Vice Versa; Portuguese Service; Spanish Service; Chess; Public Service Broadcasting; Transnational Broadcasting; French Service; Foreign Office News Department; BBC External Service; Spain’s Internal Affairs; BBC Empire Service; British Occupation Zone; Exile Government; Portuguese Listeners