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Mass-Observation

Mass-Observation is a United Kingdom social research project; originally the name of an organisation which ran from 1937 to the mid-1960s, and was revived in 1981 at the University of Sussex.

Mass-Observation originally aimed to record everyday life in Britain through a panel of around 500 untrained volunteer observers who either maintained diaries or replied to open-ended questionnaires (known as directives). The organisation also paid investigators to anonymously record people's conversation and behaviour at work, on the street and at various public occasions, including public meetings and sporting and religious events.

Origins Edit

 
Cover of a book by Mass-Observation, showing King George VI, radio news reporter Richard Dimbleby and flag-waving crowds

The creators of the Mass-Observation project were three former students from Cambridge: anthropologist Tom Harrisson (who left Cambridge before graduating),[1] poet Charles Madge and filmmaker Humphrey Jennings. Collaborators included literary critic William Empson, photographers Humphrey Spender and Michael Wickham,[2] collagist Julian Trevelyan, novelists Inez Pearn and G.B. Edwards,[3] spiritualist medium Rosemary Brown,[4] journalist Anne Symonds, and painters William Coldstream and Graham Bell. Run on a shoestring budget with money from their own pockets and the occasional philanthropic contribution or book advance, the project relied primarily on its network of volunteer correspondents.

Harrisson had set up his base in a working-class street in the northern English industrial town of Bolton (known in Mass-Observation publications as "Worktown"), in order to "systematically... record human activity in this industrial town" (Madge & Harrisson, 1938:7) using a variety of observational methods. Meanwhile, Madge, from his London home, had started to form a group of fellow-poets, artists and film-makers under the name "Mass-Observation". The two teams began their collaboration in early 1937.

An important early focus was King Edward VIII's abdication in 1936 to marry divorcée Wallis Simpson, and the succession of George VI. Dissatisfied with the pronouncements of the newspapers as to the public mood, the project's founders initiated a nationwide effort to document the feelings of the populace about important current events by collecting anecdotes, overheard comments, and "man-in-the-street" interviews on and around the coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth on 12 May 1937.

Their first published report, "May the Twelfth: Mass-Observation Day-Surveys 1937 by over two hundred observers" was published in book form. The result tended to subvert the Government's efforts at image-making. The principal editors were Humphrey Jennings and Charles Madge, with the help of T. O. Beachcroft, Julian Blackburn, William Empson, Stuart Legg and Kathleen Raine. The 1987 reprint contains an afterword by David Pocock, director of the Tom Harrisson Mass-Observation archive.

In August 1939, Mass-Observation invited members of the public to record and send them a day-to-day account of their lives in the form of a diary. No special instructions were given to these diarists so they vary greatly in their style, content and length.[5] 480 people responded to this invitation and their diaries are now held in the organisation's archive.[6]

Impact Edit

During the Second World War, Mass-Observation research was occasionally influential in shaping British public policy. In 1939 Mass-Observation publicly criticised the Ministry of Information's posters, which led to their being replaced with more appropriate ones. In addition, their study of saving habits was successfully used by John Maynard Keynes to argue for tax policy changes. During the war, there were also a few cases of Mass Observation (MO) doing research on commission for government authorities trying to shape recruiting and war propaganda: Mary Adams, for example, employed MO on commission for the Ministry of Information.

Criticism Edit

Mass-Observation has been criticised by some as an invasion of privacy. Participants were not only reporting on their own lives; they often commented on their neighbours and friends as well. Such an atmosphere of surveillance was in keeping with the rising culture of espionage, which dominated the Second World War, although Mass-Observation was an independent, not a government, effort aimed at education rather than manipulation of the public.

Mass-Observation had set out to turn the tools of anthropology used to study foreign cultures to study Britain's: to be "The Science of Us." Criticism of the scientific validity focusing on the experimental parameters began fairly early, continued throughout its existence, and was a key element in its eventual demise. Because of the self-selecting nature of the observers, they did not represent a scientifically balanced cross-section of British society as a modern public opinion poll would. Although geographically and occupationally diverse, the participants tended to be middle-class, educated, literate, and left of centre.

Decline and end Edit

Following the war, and the departure of project founders Harrisson, Madge, and Jennings, research began to focus on the commercial habits of the country[7] rather than the broader cultural research that characterised its first decade. This turn towards market research was formalised in 1949 when the project was incorporated as a private firm and, under new management, became registered as a market research limited company, Mass Observation (UK) Limited. Eventually the firm was merged with the advertising agency J. Walter Thompson's UK research agency BMRB, to form MRB International, followed by a full merger in the early 1990s.[citation needed]

Relaunch: The Mass Observation Project (1981 - present) Edit

 
The relaunched Mass-Observation at History Past, Present Future, the IHR Centenary Festival, July 2022.

A re-evaluation of the Mass-Observation archives led to a relaunch of the project in 1981.[8] Today, housed at the University of Sussex, Mass-Observation continues to collect the thoughts of its panel of writers through regular questionnaires (known as directives) and is used by students, academics, media researchers and the public for its unique collection of material on everyday life in Britain. The project issues annual call-outs for day diaries on the 12th of May each year, echoing the initial call on 12th May 1937;[9] anyone is welcome to submit a diary of their activity on this day either digitally or physically.[10]

The Mass-Observation archive of materials is currently housed in The Keep, an archive housing East Sussex and Brighton and Hove councils' historical record.[11][12]

Publications Edit

  • Mass-Observation (Charles Madge & Tom Harrisson), Mass-Observation (pamphlet), London, Frederick Muller, 1937.
  • Charles Madge & Humphrey Jennings, eds. May the Twelfth, Mass-Observation Day-Surveys 1937, by over two hundred observers, London, Faber and Faber, 1937. ISBN 0-571-14872-7
  • Charles Madge & Tom Harrisson, First Year's Work, London, Lindsay Drummond, 1938.
  • Charles Madge & Tom Harrisson, Britain, Harmondsworth, Penguin Books, 1939.
  • Mass-Observation, War Begins at Home, London, Chatto & Windus, 1940.
  • Mass-Observation, Clothes Rationing, Advertising Service Guild, 1941
  • Mass-Observation, Home Propaganda, Advertising Service Guild, 1941
  • Mass-Observation, The Pub and the People, London, Gollancz, 1943; reprinted Seven Dials Press, 1971.
  • Mass-Observation, War Factory, London, Gollancz, 1943.
  • Mass-Observation, People's Homes, London, John Murray/Advertising Service Guild, 1943
  • Mass-Observation, The Journey Home, London, John Murray/Advertising Service Guild, 1944
  • Mass-Observation, Britain and her Birth Rate, London, John Murray/Advertising Service Guild, 1945
  • Mass-Observation, Peace and the Public - A Study, London, Longmans, Green, 1947
  • Mass-Observation (Herbert Wilcox), Juvenile Delinquency, London, Falcon press, 1949.
  • Mass-Observation (with illustrations by Ronald Searle), Meet Yourself at the Doctors, London, Naldrett Press, 1949
  • Mass-Observation (with illustrations by Ronald Searle), Meet Yourself on Sunday, London, Naldrett Press, 1949
  • Tom Harrisson, Britain Revisited, London, Gollancz, 1961.
  • Tom Harrisson, Living through the Blitz, London, Collins, 1976.

A number of publications are also available from the University of Sussex. The following selection of titles also gives some idea of the scope of Mass Observation's work:

  • Attitudes to AIDS
  • Bolton Working Class Life
  • Children's Millennium Diaries
  • Everyday use of social relaxants and stimulants
  • Gender and Nationhood. Britain in the Falklands War
  • Health, sickness and the work ethic, Helen Busby (2000)
  • Looking at Europe: pointers to some British attitudes
  • Researching women's lives: notes from visits to East Central Europe
  • Mass-Observation: des 'capsules' de vie quotidienne
  • One Day in the Life of Television, ed. Sean Day-Lewis (1989)
  • Sex surveyed, 1949–1994 – The actual Mass-Observation survey was called Little Kinsey; the results were published in a book by Liz Stanley under the above title.
  • Pub and the People: A Worktown study ed. Tom Harrisson (1943)
  • Weeping in the Cinema in 1950, Sue Harper and Vincent Porter (1995)

Since the archive was moved and re-established at Sussex University, a number of books based on the diaries commissioned by Mass-Observation in 1939 have been published. These include:[13]

  • Among You Taking Notes. The Wartime Diary of Naomi Mitchison ed. Dorothy Sheridan. 1985 (Victor Gollancz). 2000 (Phoenix)
  • Our Hidden Lives, The Everyday Diaries of Forgotten Britain between 1945–48 ed. Simon Garfield 2005 (Ebury Press)
  • Love and War in London. A Woman's Diary 1939–42 by Olivia Cockett, ed. Robert Malcolmson. 2005 (Wilfrid Laurier University Press). 2008 (The History Press)
  • We Are At War. The Diaries of Five Ordinary People in Extraordinary Times ed. Simon Garfield 2006 (Ebury press)
  • Nella Last's War ed. Richard Broad and Suzie Fleming, 1981 (Falling Wall Press). 2006 (Profile Books)
  • Private Battles: How the War Almost Defeated Us ed. Simon Garfield 2007 (Ebury press)
  • Nella Last’s Peace, covering the years 1945–8. ed. Patricia and Robert Malcolmson, 2008 (Profile Books)
  • Our Longest Days - a People's History of the Second World War, an anthology ed. Sandra Koa Wing 2008 (Profile Books)
  • Wartime Women. A Mass Observation Anthology ed. Dorothy Sheridan 1990 (Heinemann). 2009 (Phoenix Press)
  • Dorset in Wartime: The Diary of Phyllis Walther 1941-1942 ed. Patricia Malcolmson and Robert Malcolmson 2009 (Dorset Record Society)

See also:

  • Hubble, Nick. Mass-Observation and Everyday Life. Houndmills-Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. 2006. ISBN 1-4039-3555-6. A history of the Mass-Observation movement from a former Research Fellow at the Mass-Observation Archive, University of Sussex, UK (from back cover).

Findings of Mass-Observation have also played a large part in such works of social history as Joe Moran's Queuing for Beginners.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Hall, David (2015). Worktown : the astonishing story of the birth of Mass-Observation. London. p. 39. ISBN 9780297871682. OCLC 918792140.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ Mass Observation on show https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/in-pictures-23578168
  3. ^ Edward Chaney, Genius Friend: G.B. Edwards and The Book of Ebenezer Le Page, (Blue Ormer Publishing, 2015)
  4. ^ Rosemary Brown (spiritualist), Look Beyond Today (1986, Bantam Press), p. 112
  5. ^ Mass Observation diaries. An introduction p.1
  6. ^ Nella Last's Peace p.303
  7. ^ Article Deck the halls with bread and lard by David Kynaston in "Seven", the Arts and Media section of The Sunday Telegraph issue no 2,428 dated 23 December 2007
  8. ^ "Mass Observation Project". www.massobs.org.uk. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  9. ^ "12th May". www.massobs.org.uk. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  10. ^ "How to take part in the 12th May". www.massobs.org.uk. Retrieved 22 March 2023.
  11. ^ "The Mass Observation Archive". the keep.info. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  12. ^ "The Keep: About Us". thekeep.info. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  13. ^ Mass Observation Archive publications 1974 onwards. Nella Last’s Peace p.304, Nella Last’s War p. vi.

Further reading Edit

  • Baker, James, and David Geiringer, "Space, text and selfhood: encounters with the personal computer in the mass observation project archive, 1991–2004", Contemporary British History, vol. 33, no. 3 (2019), pp. 293–312.
  • Hall, David. Worktown: The Astonishing Story of the Birth of Mass-Observation (2015)
  • Hinton, James. The Mass Observers: A History, 1937-1949 (2013).
  • Langhamer, Claire, "Mass observing the atom bomb: the emotional politics of August 1945", Contemporary British History, vol. 33, no. 2 (2019), pp. 208–225.

Primary sources Edit

  • Garfield, Simon, ed. Private Battles: Our Intimate Diaries: How the War Almost Defeated Us, 2007 - from the Mass Observation collection
  • Sheridan, Dorothy, ed. Wartime Women: A Mass-Observation Anthology, 1937-45, 2000

External links Edit

  • University of Sussex Mass Observation site
  • "Surveillance society: The Mass-Observation movement and the meaning of everyday life." by Caleb Crain in The New Yorker, 11 September 2006.
  • Photography taken by Humphrey Spender for the Mass-Observation project in Bolton

mass, observation, united, kingdom, social, research, project, originally, name, organisation, which, from, 1937, 1960s, revived, 1981, university, sussex, originally, aimed, record, everyday, life, britain, through, panel, around, untrained, volunteer, observ. Mass Observation is a United Kingdom social research project originally the name of an organisation which ran from 1937 to the mid 1960s and was revived in 1981 at the University of Sussex Mass Observation originally aimed to record everyday life in Britain through a panel of around 500 untrained volunteer observers who either maintained diaries or replied to open ended questionnaires known as directives The organisation also paid investigators to anonymously record people s conversation and behaviour at work on the street and at various public occasions including public meetings and sporting and religious events Contents 1 Origins 2 Impact 3 Criticism 4 Decline and end 5 Relaunch The Mass Observation Project 1981 present 6 Publications 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 Primary sources 10 External linksOrigins Edit Cover of a book by Mass Observation showing King George VI radio news reporter Richard Dimbleby and flag waving crowdsThe creators of the Mass Observation project were three former students from Cambridge anthropologist Tom Harrisson who left Cambridge before graduating 1 poet Charles Madge and filmmaker Humphrey Jennings Collaborators included literary critic William Empson photographers Humphrey Spender and Michael Wickham 2 collagist Julian Trevelyan novelists Inez Pearn and G B Edwards 3 spiritualist medium Rosemary Brown 4 journalist Anne Symonds and painters William Coldstream and Graham Bell Run on a shoestring budget with money from their own pockets and the occasional philanthropic contribution or book advance the project relied primarily on its network of volunteer correspondents Harrisson had set up his base in a working class street in the northern English industrial town of Bolton known in Mass Observation publications as Worktown in order to systematically record human activity in this industrial town Madge amp Harrisson 1938 7 using a variety of observational methods Meanwhile Madge from his London home had started to form a group of fellow poets artists and film makers under the name Mass Observation The two teams began their collaboration in early 1937 An important early focus was King Edward VIII s abdication in 1936 to marry divorcee Wallis Simpson and the succession of George VI Dissatisfied with the pronouncements of the newspapers as to the public mood the project s founders initiated a nationwide effort to document the feelings of the populace about important current events by collecting anecdotes overheard comments and man in the street interviews on and around the coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth on 12 May 1937 Their first published report May the Twelfth Mass Observation Day Surveys 1937 by over two hundred observers was published in book form The result tended to subvert the Government s efforts at image making The principal editors were Humphrey Jennings and Charles Madge with the help of T O Beachcroft Julian Blackburn William Empson Stuart Legg and Kathleen Raine The 1987 reprint contains an afterword by David Pocock director of the Tom Harrisson Mass Observation archive In August 1939 Mass Observation invited members of the public to record and send them a day to day account of their lives in the form of a diary No special instructions were given to these diarists so they vary greatly in their style content and length 5 480 people responded to this invitation and their diaries are now held in the organisation s archive 6 Impact EditDuring the Second World War Mass Observation research was occasionally influential in shaping British public policy In 1939 Mass Observation publicly criticised the Ministry of Information s posters which led to their being replaced with more appropriate ones In addition their study of saving habits was successfully used by John Maynard Keynes to argue for tax policy changes During the war there were also a few cases of Mass Observation MO doing research on commission for government authorities trying to shape recruiting and war propaganda Mary Adams for example employed MO on commission for the Ministry of Information Criticism EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Mass Observation has been criticised by some as an invasion of privacy Participants were not only reporting on their own lives they often commented on their neighbours and friends as well Such an atmosphere of surveillance was in keeping with the rising culture of espionage which dominated the Second World War although Mass Observation was an independent not a government effort aimed at education rather than manipulation of the public Mass Observation had set out to turn the tools of anthropology used to study foreign cultures to study Britain s to be The Science of Us Criticism of the scientific validity focusing on the experimental parameters began fairly early continued throughout its existence and was a key element in its eventual demise Because of the self selecting nature of the observers they did not represent a scientifically balanced cross section of British society as a modern public opinion poll would Although geographically and occupationally diverse the participants tended to be middle class educated literate and left of centre Decline and end EditFollowing the war and the departure of project founders Harrisson Madge and Jennings research began to focus on the commercial habits of the country 7 rather than the broader cultural research that characterised its first decade This turn towards market research was formalised in 1949 when the project was incorporated as a private firm and under new management became registered as a market research limited company Mass Observation UK Limited Eventually the firm was merged with the advertising agency J Walter Thompson s UK research agency BMRB to form MRB International followed by a full merger in the early 1990s citation needed Relaunch The Mass Observation Project 1981 present Edit The relaunched Mass Observation at History Past Present Future the IHR Centenary Festival July 2022 A re evaluation of the Mass Observation archives led to a relaunch of the project in 1981 8 Today housed at the University of Sussex Mass Observation continues to collect the thoughts of its panel of writers through regular questionnaires known as directives and is used by students academics media researchers and the public for its unique collection of material on everyday life in Britain The project issues annual call outs for day diaries on the 12th of May each year echoing the initial call on 12th May 1937 9 anyone is welcome to submit a diary of their activity on this day either digitally or physically 10 The Mass Observation archive of materials is currently housed in The Keep an archive housing East Sussex and Brighton and Hove councils historical record 11 12 Publications EditMass Observation Charles Madge amp Tom Harrisson Mass Observation pamphlet London Frederick Muller 1937 Charles Madge amp Humphrey Jennings eds May the Twelfth Mass Observation Day Surveys 1937 by over two hundred observers London Faber and Faber 1937 ISBN 0 571 14872 7 Charles Madge amp Tom Harrisson First Year s Work London Lindsay Drummond 1938 Charles Madge amp Tom Harrisson Britain Harmondsworth Penguin Books 1939 Mass Observation War Begins at Home London Chatto amp Windus 1940 Mass Observation Clothes Rationing Advertising Service Guild 1941 Mass Observation Home Propaganda Advertising Service Guild 1941 Mass Observation The Pub and the People London Gollancz 1943 reprinted Seven Dials Press 1971 Mass Observation War Factory London Gollancz 1943 Mass Observation People s Homes London John Murray Advertising Service Guild 1943 Mass Observation The Journey Home London John Murray Advertising Service Guild 1944 Mass Observation Britain and her Birth Rate London John Murray Advertising Service Guild 1945 Mass Observation Peace and the Public A Study London Longmans Green 1947 Mass Observation Herbert Wilcox Juvenile Delinquency London Falcon press 1949 Mass Observation with illustrations by Ronald Searle Meet Yourself at the Doctors London Naldrett Press 1949 Mass Observation with illustrations by Ronald Searle Meet Yourself on Sunday London Naldrett Press 1949 Tom Harrisson Britain Revisited London Gollancz 1961 Tom Harrisson Living through the Blitz London Collins 1976 A number of publications are also available from the University of Sussex The following selection of titles also gives some idea of the scope of Mass Observation s work Attitudes to AIDS Bolton Working Class Life Children s Millennium Diaries Everyday use of social relaxants and stimulants Gender and Nationhood Britain in the Falklands War Health sickness and the work ethic Helen Busby 2000 Looking at Europe pointers to some British attitudes Researching women s lives notes from visits to East Central Europe Mass Observation des capsules de vie quotidienne One Day in the Life of Television ed Sean Day Lewis 1989 Sex surveyed 1949 1994 The actual Mass Observation survey was called Little Kinsey the results were published in a book by Liz Stanley under the above title Pub and the People A Worktown study ed Tom Harrisson 1943 Weeping in the Cinema in 1950 Sue Harper and Vincent Porter 1995 Since the archive was moved and re established at Sussex University a number of books based on the diaries commissioned by Mass Observation in 1939 have been published These include 13 Among You Taking Notes The Wartime Diary of Naomi Mitchison ed Dorothy Sheridan 1985 Victor Gollancz 2000 Phoenix Our Hidden Lives The Everyday Diaries of Forgotten Britain between 1945 48 ed Simon Garfield 2005 Ebury Press Love and War in London A Woman s Diary 1939 42 by Olivia Cockett ed Robert Malcolmson 2005 Wilfrid Laurier University Press 2008 The History Press We Are At War The Diaries of Five Ordinary People in Extraordinary Times ed Simon Garfield 2006 Ebury press Nella Last s War ed Richard Broad and Suzie Fleming 1981 Falling Wall Press 2006 Profile Books Private Battles How the War Almost Defeated Us ed Simon Garfield 2007 Ebury press Nella Last s Peace covering the years 1945 8 ed Patricia and Robert Malcolmson 2008 Profile Books Our Longest Days a People s History of the Second World War an anthology ed Sandra Koa Wing 2008 Profile Books Wartime Women A Mass Observation Anthology ed Dorothy Sheridan 1990 Heinemann 2009 Phoenix Press Dorset in Wartime The Diary of Phyllis Walther 1941 1942 ed Patricia Malcolmson and Robert Malcolmson 2009 Dorset Record Society See also Hubble Nick Mass Observation and Everyday Life Houndmills Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan 2006 ISBN 1 4039 3555 6 A history of the Mass Observation movement from a former Research Fellow at the Mass Observation Archive University of Sussex UK from back cover Findings of Mass Observation have also played a large part in such works of social history as Joe Moran s Queuing for Beginners See also EditOne Day in History a similar project undertaken in 2006 Nella Last Housewife 49 a TV movie based on Nella Last s diary References Edit Hall David 2015 Worktown the astonishing story of the birth of Mass Observation London p 39 ISBN 9780297871682 OCLC 918792140 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Mass Observation on show https www bbc co uk news in pictures 23578168 Edward Chaney Genius Friend G B Edwards and The Book of Ebenezer Le Page Blue Ormer Publishing 2015 Rosemary Brown spiritualist Look Beyond Today 1986 Bantam Press p 112 Mass Observation diaries An introduction p 1 Nella Last s Peace p 303 Article Deck the halls with bread and lard by David Kynaston in Seven the Arts and Media section of The Sunday Telegraph issue no 2 428 dated 23 December 2007 Mass Observation Project www massobs org uk Retrieved 22 March 2023 12th May www massobs org uk Retrieved 22 March 2023 How to take part in the 12th May www massobs org uk Retrieved 22 March 2023 The Mass Observation Archive the keep info Retrieved 9 November 2014 The Keep About Us thekeep info Retrieved 9 November 2014 Mass Observation Archive publications 1974 onwards Nella Last s Peace p 304 Nella Last s War p vi Further reading EditBaker James and David Geiringer Space text and selfhood encounters with the personal computer in the mass observation project archive 1991 2004 Contemporary British History vol 33 no 3 2019 pp 293 312 Hall David Worktown The Astonishing Story of the Birth of Mass Observation 2015 Hinton James The Mass Observers A History 1937 1949 2013 Langhamer Claire Mass observing the atom bomb the emotional politics of August 1945 Contemporary British History vol 33 no 2 2019 pp 208 225 Primary sources Edit Garfield Simon ed Private Battles Our Intimate Diaries How the War Almost Defeated Us 2007 from the Mass Observation collection Sheridan Dorothy ed Wartime Women A Mass Observation Anthology 1937 45 2000External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mass Observation University of Sussex Mass Observation site Surveillance society The Mass Observation movement and the meaning of everyday life by Caleb Crain in The New Yorker 11 September 2006 Photography taken by Humphrey Spender for the Mass Observation project in Bolton Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mass Observation amp oldid 1146991334, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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