This lecture is part of the 2025 Autumn Art Lecture series:
Television: A Very Public Art
Book your free ticket through Eventbrite.
About this event
In this public lecture, Professor Beth Johnson examines how inequalities in the TV industry shape production and representation on screen.
Television is often described as a 'public art', yet the industry remains shaped by deep inequalities of class, intersecting with race, gender and place to determine who gains access to creative work and whose voices are heard. Drawing on findings from What’s On? Rethinking Class in the TV Industry, this lecture examines how these inequalities shape both production and representation. It also situates these questions within current debates over the future of public service broadcasting, from Charter renewal to the impact of global streamers, asking what it would take to reimagine television as a truly public and inclusive medium.
About the Autumn Art Lectures
As we approach the centenary of television’s invention, the Autumn Art Lecture series will reflect on its distinctive possibility as a very public art. This term was coined in the last century on the premise that such arts rightfully ‘belong’ to the people and has tended to underpin judgements about television’s failures as well as its achievements. Today, the loss of a shared, national audience and the transformation of the TV industry into a crowded, global marketplace seems to have left little space for debate about what television could or should be, but these are precisely the questions to which this year’s lecture series will give room. The series will host prominent speakers from the worlds of both academic research and television production, including Gwyneth Hughes, writer of the RTS and BAFTA winning drama, Mr Bates Vs. The Post Office (ITV, 2024).
About the speaker
Tickets
Book your free ticket through Eventbrite.