Les spots politiques télévisés britanniques : de l’anecdote télévisuelle à la mémoire collective

At the beginning of the 1950s the Party Election and Political Broadcasts (PEBs and PPBs) first started as a mere anecdote. They are now the parties’ major medium to address the voters directly and political communication has entered a “television era”. As a matter of fact, this evolution implies ce...

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Main Author: David Haigron
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Maison de la Recherche en Sciences Humaines 2005-01-01
Series:Revue LISA
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/738
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spelling doaj-742fad32e9634386b2803585ef9f5c7d2021-10-02T08:44:16ZengMaison de la Recherche en Sciences HumainesRevue LISA1762-61532005-01-01Les spots politiques télévisés britanniques : de l’anecdote télévisuelle à la mémoire collectiveDavid HaigronAt the beginning of the 1950s the Party Election and Political Broadcasts (PEBs and PPBs) first started as a mere anecdote. They are now the parties’ major medium to address the voters directly and political communication has entered a “television era”. As a matter of fact, this evolution implies certain consequences and constitutes a new step in the chronology of Britain’s political history. The first expression of this evolution is a shift of the space of political representation towards television. In this respect, PEBs and PPBs can be regarded as a prism through which it is possible to assess the different histories that they are part of, i.e. that of the British media , that of political communication and that of society and its changes. Yet Party Broadcasts have a bipolar relation to History. On the one hand, their message is meant to be circumstantial and linked to an election. On the other, their linguistic and iconic discourse aims at leaving a lasting print in collective memory.http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/738
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Haigron
spellingShingle David Haigron
Les spots politiques télévisés britanniques : de l’anecdote télévisuelle à la mémoire collective
Revue LISA
author_facet David Haigron
author_sort David Haigron
title Les spots politiques télévisés britanniques : de l’anecdote télévisuelle à la mémoire collective
title_short Les spots politiques télévisés britanniques : de l’anecdote télévisuelle à la mémoire collective
title_full Les spots politiques télévisés britanniques : de l’anecdote télévisuelle à la mémoire collective
title_fullStr Les spots politiques télévisés britanniques : de l’anecdote télévisuelle à la mémoire collective
title_full_unstemmed Les spots politiques télévisés britanniques : de l’anecdote télévisuelle à la mémoire collective
title_sort les spots politiques télévisés britanniques : de l’anecdote télévisuelle à la mémoire collective
publisher Maison de la Recherche en Sciences Humaines
series Revue LISA
issn 1762-6153
publishDate 2005-01-01
description At the beginning of the 1950s the Party Election and Political Broadcasts (PEBs and PPBs) first started as a mere anecdote. They are now the parties’ major medium to address the voters directly and political communication has entered a “television era”. As a matter of fact, this evolution implies certain consequences and constitutes a new step in the chronology of Britain’s political history. The first expression of this evolution is a shift of the space of political representation towards television. In this respect, PEBs and PPBs can be regarded as a prism through which it is possible to assess the different histories that they are part of, i.e. that of the British media , that of political communication and that of society and its changes. Yet Party Broadcasts have a bipolar relation to History. On the one hand, their message is meant to be circumstantial and linked to an election. On the other, their linguistic and iconic discourse aims at leaving a lasting print in collective memory.
url http://journals.openedition.org/lisa/738
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