• The Listener and the Mediation of Culture: BBC Publications and Middlebrow Taste

    Introduction In January 1929, a new periodical appeared on the British newsstands, inserting itself quietly but firmly between the dense columns of The Times Literary Supplement and the sensationalist headlines of the Daily Mail. It was titled The Listener. Its cover was austere, its typography modern, and its provenance formidable: it was the publishing arm of the British Broadcasting Corporation. For the next sixty years, The Listener would serve as one of the most significant cultural barometers in British history. However, in the historiography of the twentieth century, it has often been relegated to a footnote, viewed merely as a transcript service for the radio. This…

    Read more >