Morale and Mass Observation: Governing the Affective Atmosphere on the Home-Front
This paper focuses on Mass Observation (MO)’s morale work, commissioned by the British Government over the period 1939–41. It examines the ways in which MO’s earlier collecting practices were recomposed through its research into civilian morale, and linked up with national centres of calculation, in...
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doaj-c29abf32d34447aebeeb3e0170d37cc72020-11-25T00:27:20ZengUniversity of LeicesterMuseum & Society1479-83602015-01-01131224110.29311/mas.v13i1.315303Morale and Mass Observation: Governing the Affective Atmosphere on the Home-FrontBen Dibley0Michelle Kelly1Institute for Culture and Society University of Western Sydney Parramatta Campus, Building EM Locked Bag 1797 Penrith NSW 2751Institute for Culture and Society University of Western Sydney Parramatta Campus, Building EM Locked Bag 1797 Penrith NSW 2751This paper focuses on Mass Observation (MO)’s morale work, commissioned by the British Government over the period 1939–41. It examines the ways in which MO’s earlier collecting practices were recomposed through its research into civilian morale, and linked up with national centres of calculation, in particular the Ministry of Information (MoI). We explore the associations through which civilian morale was established, simultaneously, as an autonomous object of knowledge and as a particular field of intervention. As an object of knowledge, morale posited the existence of a dynamic affective ‘atmosphere’ associated with collective everyday life, which could be calibrated through various social scientific methods. As a particular field of intervention, technicians of morale postulated that this atmosphere might be regulated through various policy instruments. This paper traces the ways in which MO practices were implicated along these two axes in the emergence of civilian morale as a domain warranting the state’s ‘constant attention and supervision’.https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/315 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ben Dibley Michelle Kelly |
spellingShingle |
Ben Dibley Michelle Kelly Morale and Mass Observation: Governing the Affective Atmosphere on the Home-Front Museum & Society |
author_facet |
Ben Dibley Michelle Kelly |
author_sort |
Ben Dibley |
title |
Morale and Mass Observation: Governing the Affective Atmosphere on the Home-Front |
title_short |
Morale and Mass Observation: Governing the Affective Atmosphere on the Home-Front |
title_full |
Morale and Mass Observation: Governing the Affective Atmosphere on the Home-Front |
title_fullStr |
Morale and Mass Observation: Governing the Affective Atmosphere on the Home-Front |
title_full_unstemmed |
Morale and Mass Observation: Governing the Affective Atmosphere on the Home-Front |
title_sort |
morale and mass observation: governing the affective atmosphere on the home-front |
publisher |
University of Leicester |
series |
Museum & Society |
issn |
1479-8360 |
publishDate |
2015-01-01 |
description |
This paper focuses on Mass Observation (MO)’s morale work, commissioned by the British Government over the period 1939–41. It examines the ways in which MO’s earlier collecting practices were recomposed through its research into civilian morale, and linked up with national centres of calculation, in particular the Ministry of Information (MoI). We explore the associations through which civilian morale was established, simultaneously, as an autonomous object of knowledge and as a particular field of intervention. As an object of knowledge, morale posited the existence of a dynamic affective ‘atmosphere’ associated with collective everyday life, which could be calibrated through various social scientific methods. As a particular field of intervention, technicians of morale postulated that this atmosphere might be regulated through various policy instruments. This paper traces the ways in which MO practices were implicated along these two axes in the emergence of civilian morale as a domain warranting the state’s ‘constant attention and supervision’. |
url |
https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/315 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT bendibley moraleandmassobservationgoverningtheaffectiveatmosphereonthehomefront AT michellekelly moraleandmassobservationgoverningtheaffectiveatmosphereonthehomefront |
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1725340619893637120 |