The BBC's 'Irish troubles': Television, conflict and Northern Ireland
This book explores how news and information about the conflict in Northern Ireland was disseminated through the most accessible, powerful and popular form of media: television. It focuses on the BBC and considers how its broadcasts complicated the 'Troubles’ by challenging decisions, policies and tactics developed by governments trying to defeat a stubborn insurgency that threatened national security.

The book uses highly original sources to consider how the BBC upset the efforts of a number of governments to control the narrative of a conflict that claimed over 3,500 lives and caused deep emotional scarring to thousands of people. Using recently released archival material from the BBC and a variety of government archives, the book addresses the contentious relationship between broadcasting officials, politicians, the army, police and civil service from the outbreak of violence throughout the 1980s.

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The BBC's 'Irish troubles': Television, conflict and Northern Ireland
This book explores how news and information about the conflict in Northern Ireland was disseminated through the most accessible, powerful and popular form of media: television. It focuses on the BBC and considers how its broadcasts complicated the 'Troubles’ by challenging decisions, policies and tactics developed by governments trying to defeat a stubborn insurgency that threatened national security.

The book uses highly original sources to consider how the BBC upset the efforts of a number of governments to control the narrative of a conflict that claimed over 3,500 lives and caused deep emotional scarring to thousands of people. Using recently released archival material from the BBC and a variety of government archives, the book addresses the contentious relationship between broadcasting officials, politicians, the army, police and civil service from the outbreak of violence throughout the 1980s.

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The BBC's 'Irish troubles': Television, conflict and Northern Ireland

The BBC's 'Irish troubles': Television, conflict and Northern Ireland

by Robert Savage
The BBC's 'Irish troubles': Television, conflict and Northern Ireland

The BBC's 'Irish troubles': Television, conflict and Northern Ireland

by Robert Savage

Paperback(Reprint)

$29.95 
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Overview

This book explores how news and information about the conflict in Northern Ireland was disseminated through the most accessible, powerful and popular form of media: television. It focuses on the BBC and considers how its broadcasts complicated the 'Troubles’ by challenging decisions, policies and tactics developed by governments trying to defeat a stubborn insurgency that threatened national security.

The book uses highly original sources to consider how the BBC upset the efforts of a number of governments to control the narrative of a conflict that claimed over 3,500 lives and caused deep emotional scarring to thousands of people. Using recently released archival material from the BBC and a variety of government archives, the book addresses the contentious relationship between broadcasting officials, politicians, the army, police and civil service from the outbreak of violence throughout the 1980s.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781526116888
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Publication date: 03/16/2017
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 296
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Robert J. Savage is Professor of the Practice of History at Boston College

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. The origins of the BBC in Northern Ireland
2. ‘The Troubles’ arrive
3. Balance? The BBC in Northern Ireland 1972–78
4. Roy Mason, the BBC and the second battle of Culloden
5. Margaret Thatcher and ‘the oxygen of publicity’
Index

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