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Re-making Londoners: Models of a Healthy
Society in the Nation's Capital, 1918-1939
Centre
for Metropolitan History: 13 November 2002
The creation of a healthy society was, perhaps,
the dominant concern of social reformers in the first half of
the twentieth century and many historians have considered the
legislative processes through which such a society was produced.
What have, hitherto, been little studied, are the locations in
which the ideolgies of a healthy society were produced, especially
in the inter-war decades. It is the aim of this workshop, using
London as a case study, to investigate how social reformers developed
particular models, practices and environments of reform in order
to re-make London's population into a race of healthy, active
and educated citizens between the end of the Great War in 1918
and the declaration of the Second World War in September 1939.
Re-Writing the Past
Institute of Historical Research: 3rd-5th July 2002
"This year sees the fiftieth anniversary of Past
and Present and one of the purposes of the seventy-first Anglo-American
Conference is to mark and to celebrate this half-century. First
published in February 1952, Past and Present has long been recognised
as one of the foremost historical journals in the English-speaking
world. From the very beginning, it sought to encompass the whole
of human history, to draw its contributors from around the globe,
to encourage controversy and disagreement, to welcome approaches
and contributions provided by other disciplines, and to address
large issues and broad themes in prose that was both scholarly
and accessible.
But as befits a journal which has constantly sought
to stress the interconnectedness of the past and present, and
to identify and stimulate new approaches to the study of history,
this anniversary conference will be primarily concerned with a
timely and substantive task: to ask how and why and where and
by whom the past has been – and still is – regularly
re-written.
This continual re-writing is partly because
of the dynamic inherent in the scholarly process; but it is also
because of broader changes and specific imperatives in politics,
society and culture. Under the general heading of ‘Re-Writing
the Past’, the conference will explore such themes as: the
liquidation of the past; the invention and dis-invention of tradition;
the politics of historiographical revision; history as myth, memory
and identity; the creation and contestation of historical epochs
and periods; competing versions of the same past; history as propaganda
and history as protest; history as orthodoxy and history as heresy;
globalisation, IT and world history."
Launch Event: Centre for the History of Women's
Education
King
Alfred's College: 7th June 2002
"The Centre provides a forum for research
into the gendered nature of educational provision, practice and
thought in order to provide a sound evidence base for policy and
practice in respect of education for women and girls. The Centre
takes a broad cultural definition of Education: one which transcends
schooling to encompass learning and teaching (formal and informal)
at any phase of the life-cycle, in any setting or historical period,
including the recent past."
I presented a short paper on 'informal education',
the representation of men/women in VD posters.
War and The Media:
The Changing Context of Reportage and Propaganda in The Twentieth
Century
University
of Kent @ Canterbury : 30th August - 4th September 2001
"This is the first major international conference on the
impact of the media on war. Enormous social and technological
changes have radically changed our lives over the past 150 years.
The aim of the conference is to analyse how these developments
have altered the relationships between politicians, the military
and the media in the shaping of policies that may lead to conflict
and the manner. The complex relationship between propaganda and
censorship and the effect of the media on the formation of public
opinion together with journalistic ethics and motives are also
probed."
Associated Publication: Connelly, M.,
& Welch, D. (eds), War
and the Media: Reportage and Propaganda, I.B. Tauris, 2004
Beyond
the Museum: Working with
Collections in the Digital Age
Humanities
Computing Unit, University of Oxford: 20th April 2001
"Is the new digital age the answer to the
prayers of museums, archives, and libraries? Does it free up collections
allowing unprecedented access facilities for scholars and the
public? Or is it all built on a house of cards? Do the new technologies
really offer us anything, and are they sidetracking the holders
of the nation's heritage into areas that really have unproven
benefits? Is funding being diverted away from more needy services?
Can the museum, or similar institution, actually survive in such
a fast-changing culture?"
Health Promotion in Historical Context
Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine, UEA,
27th - 28th April 2001
Presentations Included:
- 'Statistical Images of Diseases in Health
Exhibitions in Britain in the 1930s'
- '"No One Receiving?' The Audience for
Health Education Films, 1919-48'
- 'Health Promotion and the Transformation
of Chronic Diseases after the Second World War (1945-1955)'
- 'The Cycle of Conflict, the Historic Development
of the Public Health and Health Promotion Movements'
Aspects of Gender in Contemporary Britain
Institute
of Contemporary British History, 10th-12th July, 2000
"The conference
aims to bring together contemporary historians as well as researchersin
related fields including cultural studies, sociology and social
anthropology, to explore aspects of gender history which have
been neglected in previous research."
Anglo-American 'War and Peace'
Institute
of Historical Research, 5th-7th July, 2000
Seminars Attended: 'Health
and Education'; 'Representing War' 'and 'Cold War Culture'
Public History Now
Public
History Group, Ruskin College,
Oxford, 20th May, 2000
'Nostalgia and the Visual Image: The memory
of propaganda posters of the Second World War.'
ABSTRACT: This paper will explore the place
that Second World War Home Front posters have in popular memory,
with a particular focus upon the nostalgia industry that has grown
up around them.
There are countless objects that can be purchased
adorned with images and slogans from wartime posters: not only
postcards and reproduction posters, but mugs, key rings, T-shirts,
chocolate bars, playing cards, and many others. Money would not
be spent producing such objects unless it was felt there was a
market for them, and such objects have been produced by the Imperial
War Museum and the Public Record Office, amongst others, for many
years, in the knowledge that they will sell.
The paper will consider why such products do
sell, with their appeal based not only upon their immediate visual
impact, [Footnote 1] often the reason they were successful in
the first place, but upon their status as social and historical
documents, and as a reminder of a past, mythical or otherwise.
Many people remember the posters from the war, as can be illustrated
by replies received from a questionnaire distributed, in 1997-9,
as part of the PhD project.
Posters often trigger memories, in particular
causing people become nostalgic about, for instance, 'the Blitz
spirit'. This has largely been deemed a myth, [Footnote 2] and
it will be interesting to consider how far such a 'spirit' was
propagated through the war posters, and how far the posters have
contributed to such a 'myth'. Yet, memories of war posters are
not restricted to those who can remember the war, people of all
generations can list many war poster slogans, such as 'Careless
Talk Costs Lives'. There are two probable factors which account
for this: many slogans have become tied up with the mythology
of war; and war posters are used extensively as illustration in
both children's and populist 'coffee table' books, where the poster
is used to get across a point pictorially, as was the original
purpose.
The paper will take into account the original
purpose of propaganda and advertising posters, designed to be
ephemeral, but also memorable. It will attempt to define what
factors determine if a poster can be deemed a 'success', especially
from a later point in time. The paper will also briefly reflect
upon how changes in history have enabled the poster to be considered
as a historical source.
1 Gleeson, J. Collecting Prints
and Posters, 1997, p92
2 Calder, A. The Myth of the Blitz, 1991
With Gary
Peatling 'Appeasement and public history now and in the future'.
The day was interesting and well attended,
with a very friendly atmosphere. The
Paper Presented
Research Day: National Identities
King Alfred's,
Winchester, September 21st, 1999
This was a very successful, well attended event.
Short papers were given by a student and tutor from each research
centre on the common theme of national identities.
The day included a paper given by myself,
entitled 'World War II Propaganda
and the Image of Britain'. Once a brief definition
of propaganda and the job of the poster had been established,
three posters from the First World War were considered,
demonstrating the belief that most appealed to either
a mythical past, a sense of good sportsmanship, or
obedience to a sense of authority. The Second World
War was even more of a 'total war' than the First
had been, and those involved needed to know that they
were not only fighting AGAINST something, but also
FOR it. The main focus of the paper was then upon
two posters 'Your Britain, Fight for it Now', produced
in 1942, around the time of the Beveridge
Report. On the one hand we saw the nostalgic image,
depicted by Frank Newbould, of a pastoral and rural
Britain, which encourages effort in order to maintain
perceived past traditions, whilst Abram Games depicted
an urban image as an image of change for a better
Britain, a real fight for the future.
1940s Society: WW2 Posters
The
1940s Society, 25th June, 1999
"In June, Rebecca Lewis spoke
to us on the subject of British Homefront Posters
of WW2. Rebecca is very knowledgeable about her subject
and spoke not only on the design of the posters but
also on the political motivations behind them. The
talk was illustrated by a large number of slides and
we certainly came away with a better understanding
of the subject."
Ian Bayley, The
1940s Society
The Art of Propaganda
Duxford,
IWM, 5th June, 1999
An interesting day through which four
presentations were given on the subjects of propaganda as shown
through film, posters , Nazi radio, and black propaganda.
'Posters: Persuasion
and Subversion'
V&A,
12th-13th June, 1998
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The effectiveness
of the poster as a publicity medium and the pervasiveness
of the poster image were examined in the context of developments
in 20th century graphic communication.
The conference examined the history of
the poster from the 'artistic' posters of the late 19th
century, to the large-scale billboard campaigns of the modern
day, which are an inescapable feature of the modern landscape.
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