ABSTRACT

The media have always played a central role in organising the way ideas flow through societies. But what happens when those ideas are disruptive to normal social relations? Bringing together work by scholars in history, media and cultural studies and sociology, this collection explores this role in more depth and with more attention paid to the complexities behind conventional analyses. Attention is paid to morality and regulation; empire and film; the role of women; authoritarianism; wartime and fears of treachery; and fears of cultural contamination.

The book begins with essays that contextualise the theoretical and historiographical issues of the relationship between social fears, moral panics and the media. The second section provides case studies which illustrate the ways in which the media has participated in, or been seen as the source of, the creation of threats to society. Finally, the third section then shows how historical research calls into question simple assumptions about the relationship between the media and social disruption.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

part I|45 pages

Approaches to the Media, Moral Panics and Social Fears

chapter 1|15 pages

Model Answers

Moral Panics and Media History

chapter 3|10 pages

The Wertham Case

Evaluating Effects of Media Theories

part II|69 pages

The Media as an Object of Fear

chapter 4|17 pages

‘I Will Answer You, My Friend, but I am Afraid'

Telephones and the Fear of a New Medium in Nineteenth and Early Twentieth-Century Italy

chapter 7|22 pages

The Response to Television in the UK 1947–77

A Study in the Media and Social Fear

part III|103 pages

Panics, Fear and the Media

chapter 8|18 pages

Unmarried

Unmarried Motherhood in Post-First World War British Film

chapter 9|15 pages

Watching the Detectives (and the Constables)

Fearing the Police in 1920s Britain

chapter 10|15 pages

Fifth Columnists, Collaborators and Black Marketeers

Fearing the ‘Enemy Within' in the Wartime British Media

chapter 11|14 pages

Citizenship, Sexual Anxiety and Womanhood in Second World War Britain

The Case of the Man with the Cleft Chin

chapter 12|19 pages

‘Enemy Television'

Fear as a Motive Force in East German Television Programming

chapter 13|20 pages

‘The Ugly Tide of Today's Teenage Violence'

Revisiting the Clockwork Orange Controversy in the UK