@book{eb5ae820beaf4b0086f52cf8fcfeb27a,
title = "The Early Years of Television and the BBC",
abstract = "The British journalist C. P. Scott once said of television, {\textquoteleft}Not a nice word. Greek and Latin mixed. Clumsy.{\textquoteright} From its earliest days, when people began to discover ways of {\textquoteleft}seeing at a distance{\textquoteright} through to the multi-platform media environment of today, television has shown itself to be a resilient and adaptable method of communication. Based on detailed archival research, The Early Years of Television and the BBC explores the relationship between the BBC and television from the mid-1920s through to the outbreak of the Second World War. Jamie Medhurst provides an account of the oft-forgotten 30-line television service (1932–5) and re-evaluates the belief that Sir John Reith, the Corporation{\textquoteright}s Director-General until 1938, would have nothing to do with television.",
keywords = "20th century television, Baird Television Company, BBC, British television, early television, television history",
author = "Medhurst, {J. L.}",
note = "Funded by British Academy Small Research Grant (£3117) Ref: SG-50236 ",
year = "2022",
month = jun,
language = "English",
isbn = "9780748637867",
publisher = "Edinburgh University Press",
address = "United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland",
}