Glasgow Media Group

"They have skills to rival any market research organisation,
combined with a name independent researchers would die for.
" ~ The Sunday Times

 
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The Media Group

“The Glasgow Media Unit may have been the scourge of the Establishment. But its methodical approach to research won admirers - and imitators - on all sides. In the 1980's, conservative supporters were copying its techniques to expose alleged Labour leanings in the BBC. The emergence of spin doctors and media advisers in all political parties can be linked to the work done in Glasgow. The media unit was the first to pay attention to visual context in which people were interviewed. The wrong backdrop can mean electoral death. They have skills to rival any market research organisation, combined with a name independent researchers would die for. ”

(The Sunday Times)



Getting the Message: News, Truth and Power
(Routledge, 1993)

”.this volume is an illuminating and valuable addition to the field of media studies, which sensibly combines theoretical insight with valuable empirical investigation. In short, I have no hesitation in recommending this book to anyone with even a cursory interest in the role of the mass media in contemporary society. ”

(Sociology)

”The essays have a good old positivist clarity that epitomises the genuinely elucidatory aims of the Glasgow Group ”

(New Statesman and Society)



Glasgow Media Group Readers, (Volumes 1 and 2)
(Eds J.Eldridge and G Philo, Routledge, 1995)

“You don't want to read everything you read in the paper , ” we say, but what else are we supposed to do? TV news in particular comes into the living room with all the force of a given. Seeing is believing. No one has done more to expose this conspiracy of cosiness through more then 20 years than the Glasgow Media Group. British Leyland and its Seventies sleepy-shifts; the ravening bacchantes of Greenham; the waiting wives who were interviewed about Our Boys in the Falklands - and the widows who weren't; the smart weapons of the Gulf War - and the less intelligent ones we didn't get to hear about: It's all here. The Glasgow Group have got their hands dirty with a nuts-and-bolts dismantling of the manufacture of consent, taking apart news coverage image by image, word by word. There are no Thought Police in the modern democracy, but Big Brother exists just the same, dispersed in the minds of self-censoring broadcasters and journalists. An extravagant claim? Read all about it, chapter and verse, in the enthralling, disturbing pieces collected here.

(The Scotsman)

”Vital sourcebooks, informed by theory, but always hot on lavish empirical data ”

(New Statesman and Society)



Message Received
(ed G. Philo, Longman 1999)

”Message received potential has the widest of audiences, from politicians and public policy-makers, to media students. It is a thought-provoking read. With wise views on society and media. ”

(THES)



Market Killing
(ed. G.Philo and D. Miller, Longman 2000)

”Market Killing is a terrific book. It articulates very clearly what the consequences and costs, culturally-economically-politically, of post-modernist academic theorisation have been. ”

(The Media Channel, Book Corner)

”.it will fuel a debate that has been rumbling on in the United kingdom - if not sotto voce, at least for the most part politely coded - for several years. Articles and chapters addressing the media/cultural-studies divide have been appearing over the past few years, but this book represents the end of the polite conversation and the start of something altogether more vigorous - and three cheers for that.

(THES)

”This is a book for academics and cultural students brave enough to use the ammunition it contains to attempt to bring their teachers down to earth. The last word on this should go to Noam Chomsky who is of course an academic himself and a great believer in critical scholarship:

There are moments when a critical stance towards one's own society is (barely) tolerated; periods of popular ferment and struggle. But these moments are the exceptions in the history of intellectuals and academic social scientists.

The usual stance is triumphalism about domestic power and providing the ideological support for it, meanwhile feathering ones own nest. ”

(Irish Press)

”.A more ideological attack upon academic research has now been mounted by .the Glasgow University Media Group. (The Book) condemns a great deal of contemporary social science research for its failure to engage with the real world. Academics have become “lost in language games in which the ‘real' is just another discourse ”. Indeed so fascinated have some social scientist become with the relativistic and self-referential vacuities of post-modernism they completely ignore any reference to human agency, to the role citizens might play in changing the World in which they find themselves. This self-insulating is compounded by the readiness of academics to retreat into private languages, to take refuge in an obscurity that “secures the status of the author ” and, in some cases, disguises the “slightness of their contribution to public debate ”. In these circumstances we can only be grateful that there are some new heroes on the block. The practical results of this academic “abdication of responsibility ” conclude Philo and Miller, is that the hard work of uncovering the truth about such matters as political corruption, state secrecy and surveillance, censorship and news reporting, and the growth of media empires, has been left to journalists. ”

(Laurie Taylor, The Guardian.)

 
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