65 research outputs found
Special Section Introduction: Mass Observation as Method
Since Mass Observation's foundation in 1937, the organisation has played witness to the great and the small events of everyday life during the last eight decades, recording people's opinions, beliefs and experiences, and making them available for researchers to develop new interpretations of British social life. Although the data produced is often messy and unwieldy and apparently contradicts many sociological assumptions about methodological rigour, the Archive is uniquely placed to offer detailed and exceptionally rich accounts of the fibre of everyday life and to reveal the deep complexities of family, personal and intimate life. As Mike Savage notes in Identities and Social Change in Britain since 1940, 'Mass-Observation is the most studied, and arguably the most important, social research institution of the mid-twentieth century' (Savage 2010: 57). He situates this significance in it providing the focus for the emergence of a new intellectual class in late 1930s Britain of people who identified with a social scientific outlook. Until that point in time, the main point of entry into intellectual circles for newly educated classes was through literary culture, which was often implicitly elitist and hierarchical in its attitude to wider society
Listen to Nice
In describing Humphrey Jennings’ wartime documentary propaganda film, 'Listen to Britain' (1942), a film with an overtly poetic sensibility and dominantly musical soundtrack, John Corner asserts that ‘through listening to
Britain, we are enabled to properly look at it'. This idea of sound leading our attention to the images has underpinned much of the collaborative
work between composer and sound designer, Geoffrey Cox, and documentary filmmaker, Keith Marley. It is in this context that the article will analyse an extract of A Film About Nice (Marley and Cox 2010), a contemporary
re-imagining of Jean Vigo’s silent documentary, 'A propos de Nice' (1930). Reference will be made throughout to the historical context, and the filmic and theoretical influences that have informed the way music and creative sound design have been used to place emphasis on hearing a place, as much as seeing it
The Origin of the Hubble Sequence in Lambda-CDM Cosmology
The Galform semi-analytic model of galaxy formation is used to explore the
mechanisms primarily responsible for the three types of galaxies seen in the
local universe: bulge, bulge+disk and disk, identified with the visual
morphological types E, S0/a-Sbc, and Sc-Scd, respectively. With a suitable
choice of parameters the Galform model can accurately reproduce the observed
local K_s-band luminosity function (LF) for galaxies split by visual
morphological type. The successful set of model parameters is used to populate
the Millennium Simulation with 9.4 million galaxies and their dark matter
halos. The resulting catalogue is then used to explore the evolution of
galaxies through cosmic history. The model predictions concur with recent
observational results including the galaxy merger rate, the star formation rate
and the seemingly anti-hierarchical evolution of ellipticals. However, the
model also predicts significant evolution of the elliptical galaxy LF that is
not observed. The discrepancy raises the possibility that samples of z~1
galaxies which have been selected using colour and morphological criteria may
be contaminated with galaxies that are not actually ellipticals.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Missing reference adde
“It Has Always Known And We Have Always Been ‘Other’: Knowing Capitalism And The ‘Coming Crisis’ Of Sociology Confront The Concentration System and Mass-Observation,”
Observing America: what mass-observation reveals about British views of the USA
Since its foundation in 1937, the social research organisation Mass-Observation has systematically documented the opinions of a British public experiencing profound societal change. This includes the most extensive data available on grassroots attitudes towards the USA, from the outbreak of the Second World War to the final phase of the Cold War. Most of the scholarship on Anglo-American relations focuses on the political and diplomatic elites of Britain and the USA. The extent to which their interaction reflected and reinforced public opinion is seldom considered. This article uses the Mass-Observation archive to situate elite interaction within the broader context of public opinion. In so doing, it assesses the extent to which British political leaders have in their dealings with the USA represented the views of the electorate they serve
Annual estimates of occupancy for bryophytes, lichens and invertebrates in the UK, 1970–2015
Here, we determine annual estimates of occupancy and species trends for 5,293 UK bryophytes, lichens, and invertebrates, providing national scale information on UK biodiversity change for 31 taxonomic groups for the time period 1970 to 2015. The dataset was produced through the application of a Bayesian occupancy modelling framework to species occurrence records supplied by 29 national recording schemes or societies (n = 24,118,549 records). In the UK, annual measures of species status from fine scale data (e.g. 1 × 1 km) had previously been limited to a few taxa for which structured monitoring data are available, mainly birds, butterflies, bats and a subset of moth species. By using an occupancy modelling framework designed for use with relatively low recording intensity data, we have been able to estimate species trends and generate annual estimates of occupancy for taxa where annual trend estimates and status were previously limited or unknown at this scale. These data broaden our knowledge of UK biodiversity and can be used to investigate variation in and drivers of biodiversity change
<i>Worktown: The Astonishing Story of the Birth of Mass-Observation</i>. By David Hall.
The Intermodern Assumption of the Future: William Empson, Charles Madge and Mass-Observation
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