SCIENCE ON TV: A CRITIQUE
by Carl Gardner and Robert M.
Young
The differences between the dramatically changing role of science and
the way that it is represented on TV needs to be examined with a view towards generating a
much more critical approach one which has the effect of opening up issues for
public debate, rather than, as at present, leading to closure. Science, technology and
medicine and their respective modes of discourse are an increasingly important component
of the social formation in advanced capitalist countries. After school, for the
overwhelming majority of people in Britain, science (which we will use as a generic term
for science, technology and medicine) is experienced almost wholly through the film and
broadcast media. For most of the general population 'science' is constructed through TV
science programmes, both 'serious' and fictional. In the commonly understood meaning of
science, it makes little sense to talk of a discrete body of knowledge and set of
practices, apart from this representation. TV, then, is the principal bearer of the social
meaning of 'science', and it is our contention that such a meaning has real material
effects within our society. TV's construction is a lot more than a simple mirroring of
scientific endeavour, an innocent transmission of scientific achievement into the public
domain. As part of a larger project, it is our intention in this article to
interrogate the view of science as presented by TV, because it plays an important role in
impeding the possibility of social and political intervention to change the course of
science, technology and medicine. The current ideology of science on TV is a material
force in reinforcing current priorities and practices in society. Any adequate analysis of TV's view of science would have to deal with
the following issues: 1) The already existing ideologies and conceptions of science which TV
'feeds off' and its practitioners appropriate and propagate in the course of programme
elaboration; for example, empiricism, positivism, and the current philosophies of science
as represented in the work of Karl Popper and Thomas Kuhn, and those who debate about
their positions. 2) The social and cultural formation of TV's practitioners, their view
of the television process and their role within it, including their class, education and
training, as well as the subculture of media and cultural theory within which they move. 3) The specific labour process of television, the division of labour
within TV practice and the institutionalisation of science's own division of labour within
TV departments, including the separation of content from the requirements of production
and the barriers between writers, presenters, researchers, directors, etc. 4) The various televisual styles and techniques usually regarded inside
television as 'common sense', 'natural', and 'transparent'. TV's meanings are constructed
through these devices and, in the case of science, are crucial in the maintenance of the
status of scientific knowledge. 5) Directly economic determinations, particularly the increasing
requirements of co-production deals with the United States. Because of the state of our
own research at the time of writing, this article will concern itself principally with (1)
and (4), while touching the other questions where appropriate. This does not mean that we
consider those questions primary. It is simply the case that we thought it worthwhile to
take stock of our work in progress. We draw our examples from the following series: Horizon,
Tomorrows World, Don't Just Sit There, The Voyage of Charles Darwin, The Body in
Question, Oppenheimer, and various 'one-off' documentaries. We will not be concerned
here with the fictional representation of science in the context of drama and children's
TV Doctor Who, Quatermass, Blake's Seven, Star Trek, etc. or science
as treated in several recent popular feature films, such as Alien, Close Encounters of
the Third Kind, The Empire Strikes Back, etc., some of which have already appeared on
television. This ought to be attempted in any wider study, and the interaction and overlap
between the various genres thoroughly analysed. Nor will it be possible, except in
passing, to examine the way that science enters into and is elaborated by various news and
current affairs series not primarily designated as 'scientific'. As this article is addressed primarily to questions of TV
representation and programme-making strategies, we would like to finish with some
suggestions as to how TV might deal with them alternatives at the level of TV
styles, conventions and representational devices. How would one do a TV programme about a
particular subject to signify which meanings for which audiences is a
question which must be continually posed. TV science practitioners constantly defend their
work with the unchallengeable rebuff: 'Oh, we did that in a programme in September
1977...' (rather like the American tourist rampaging through Europe 'We've done Rome
and we've done Paris', etc.). How precisely they did it, how it was treated,
what were the dominant meanings, ought to be the principal questions at issue. But it
should be borne in mind that alternative programme-making strategies could best be
elaborated in the process of production. This is a process in which we have become
involved since our research began, and our participant observations about it will be
presented in our larger study. How science is presented on television is not merely a matter of
aesthetic nuance. It is a cliché that science, technology and medicine are impinging more
and more directly and pervasively on people's lives a true cliché. They are not
merely impinging (a model drawn from the erroneous 'internal-external' dichotomy between
science and society). They are reconstituting work and consumption. Television proclaims
these changes and occasionally plays an impressive role in agenda setting. For example,
the Horizon programme 'Now the Chips are Down' had an important part in waking up
the government and the public to the importance of microprocessors, while The Mighty
Micro, despite its numerous weaknesses, spelled out some of the likely effects of
chips. But the impact of the new technology on work, employment, leisure and
consumption are not the only aspects. The dramatic increases in the real subordination in
the labour process have hardly been mentioned: monitoring, pacing, surveillance, the
scientific management (or Taylorisation) of white collar work. The ways in which such
programmes are presented separates the substance of knowledge and technology from the
process of origination and prioritisation which would make explicit the values involved.
These topics are precluded by the breathless form of presentation which operates at an
expository pace and conveys a sense of inevitability rather than one of social choice. The
means of production, the setting of research and development agendas, and the social
relations of production and application of scientific knowledge all embody particular
positions about the development of society, yet these are rarely examined. Looking at the
issue at a more exclusively economic level, as Frank Webster and Kevin Robins have shown
in their article 'Mass Communication and "Information Technology" ' (1979) the
entire domain of information and communication has merged into those of social control in
all spheres of life and is increasingly directed by multinational corporations (Mattelart,
1979, p. 9). Equally dramatic changes are afoot in medicine: in artificial
fertilisation and implantation, cryogenesis, foetal diagnosis, choice of infant sex, host
mothers, transplant surgery, cerebrally-implanted electrodes, mood control, control of
immune responses, treatment of viral diseases and cancer. The public is slowly being made
aware of some of the consequences of biotechnology for the food, drug and chemical
industries, and the significance of genetic engineering and cloning is becoming apparent.
It is not yet widely appreciated, however, that biotechnological and medical changes are
likely to affect our lives, jobs and economy even more than microprocessors and to raise
problems which we have not yet begun to know how to debate or to resolve. Whose baby is
it, for example, when the egg which comes from one person, with the sperm from AID
(artificial insemination by donor), is then gestated and given birth to by another person?
What does it mean to change living forms virtually at will by means of genetic
engineering? How will the different spheres of life be maintained when home terminals for
clerical and executive work, as well as for leisure and shopping, eliminate the current
bases for distinguishing the roles of houseworker, home worker and consumer? What will
become of labour-intensive agricultural societies when a single machine in a single
traverse of a field can do the work currently requiring intensive cultivation and up to
eight machines and twelve energy passes per crop? We choose these questions from a large
number of pertinent ones in order to convey a sense of the sorts of social and political
questions which the current modes of presentation of science do not seem inclined or
equipped to consider. We have on the one hand a firmly-established and highly-regarded set of
conventions for the presentation of science conventions which are expository,
narrative and fundamentally celebratory, purveying culture to an audience of passive
consumers who regard a spectacle. On the other hand, we have developments in science which
are fundamentally reconstituting aspects of life, including conception, birth, behavioural
control, work, education, sexuality, leisure, consumption, bodily repair, senescence,
death and the recycling of human organs. There is an alarming inconsistency between the
mode of presentation and the significance of these issues. We want to argue that it is an
urgent priority for television to alter its approach to these matters in fundamental ways
to move from science as cultural consumption to science as critique; from the
content of science as progress to an analysis of the constitution of science, technology
and medicine, of their labour processes and of their articulations with other practices;
from the 'impact' of science to the process of constitution of its research programme,
opening up to public scrutiny and prioritisation the origination of issues, facts and
artifacts. In order to see the point of recasting the approach to science, it is
necessary to undermine the prevailing distinction between science and society two
domains which are treated as interacting, with the interaction more or less (usually less)
spelled out. We want, instead, to propose a conception of science as constituted by and
constitutive of social relations just as others have treated technology and medicine as
social relations (see David Dickson, 1974, Webster and Robins, 1979, Figlio, 1978 and 1979
and Young, 1977). As things now stand, the eyes of programme-makers are firmly fixed on
the content of knowledge and the process of discovery. There is, in addition, another
topic which tends to be considered separately from the substance of knowledge (in itself
regarded as 'neutral'): its social impact. The result is that discovery and substance are
presented as internal to science, while social impact is seen as an interacting variable.
Science is one thing, context another. We think this approach has produced a systematic
blinkering, a tunnel vision with separate programmes and separate series concerned with
aspects of a single totality which should be seen as a whole. The social relations and
social processes of science should be conceived of as integral to its substance. It is
worth mentioning that this is by now a commonplace in radical studies of other aspects of
culture. The privileged treatment of science in these respects is curious, to say the
least. Literature, drama, plastic and graphic arts, cinema, and television itself are
currently studied according to models which attempt to relate the context, presentation,
content and impact into a single coherent account of meanings. This is also a commonplace
in the treatment of science from periods other than our own. Historians of ancient,
medieval, Arab, Renaissance, seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth-century science go to
considerable lengths to show how the science is constituted by the historical forces of
the period, including frames of reference, major theoretical concepts and even specific
research topics. All bear the stamp of their times and places. One only has to think of
Foucault's emphasis on the preoccupation with classification across a wide range of
disciplines in the eighteenth century, as well as his historical accounts of psychiatry
and clinical medicine (see Foucault, 1970, 1971 and 1973). Yet the origins, process, substance and impact of current science are
still parcelled out into different niches. The BBC, in particular, actually
institutionalises these divisions in its programme-making departments. Horizon does
a programme on 'The Real Bionic Man'; Man Alive another on the ethical,
compassionate and legal problems of obtaining organs for transplant ('Wanted: Human Spare
Parts'); Horizon does a programme on adipose brown tissue whose metabolism may
explain fatness and thinness; Man Alive does a programme on fat as a feminist issue
of body image. None of these programmes gives any hint of how its explanations might
conceivably articulate with other theories. Brass Tacks does a programme 'Fit to be
Born' on the questions surrounding mongolism, spina bifida, and Tay Sachs disease, in
which we are told nothing about the state of scientific knowledge of the origins and
natures of these defects beyond their being genetic. Horizon increasingly attempts to address questions which go
beyond the exposition of the content of science but does so in an uncritical fashion. In a
programme about sugar production in Brazil we are told (three times) that 'Brazil has
plenty of cheap labour', which is roughly equivalent to saying that Pakistan has lots of
thin people. In a programme on Mexican oil Horizon manages to state in conclusion
that 'Nobody wants the oil to distort the Mexican economy or the happier aspects of the
Mexican way of life' and cuts to Olé! singers with guitars and sombreros.
These examples are drawn from a large collection to indicate just how careless of other
aspects of its context science programmes can be. The division of labour operates here as
in other spheres so that it precludes access to the totality of relations which make up
any whole. Horizon does science alternating with environment; Tomorrow's World does
new technologies in a 'gee whiz' way; The Risk Business does a combination of 'gee
whiz' technology and retooling in the national interest'; Man Alive tells 'stories
of folk' on the receiving end the sociological and human interest aspects; The
Money Programme deals with the economics of it all; Open Secret catches out
individuals and companies who have abused (otherwise neutral?) science and technology. Another obstacle to a wider and deeper approach to the representation
of science is the over-reliance on the image of scientific endeavour which scientists hold
and propagate when considering their work in public contexts. It is our impression, backed
up by discussions and interviews with people taking part in the making of science
programmes, that belief in the relative autonomy of knowledge is being uncritically
propagated on television. The boundary between the academy and the market-place is being
constantly defended on the box, in Presidential Addresses, (e.g., to the Royal Society)
and perhaps in secondary education. As far as we can tell, this is principally a matter of
public relations, since it certainly isn't a view propagated by scientists at work. In
other settings, the socio-economic constitution of science, technology and medicine is a
commonplace, not excluding the offices, coffee rooms, conferences and granting bodies of
scientists, technologists and medical workers. Of course, there are mediations between
capital and the state on the one hand and individual researchers on the other, but the
research councils, university grants committees and private foundations are themselves
increasingly calling for research which meets the needs of industry, while a shrinking
public purse makes hustling for direct grants from industry more and more necessary. Whole
labs and institutions are dependent on short-term grants for specific projects. Similarly,
there is a growing field of research within large industries IBM, ICI, Dupont. The
drug industry depends on such labs. Bell Laboratories is the largest private research
facility and exists within the world's largest corporation. On a smaller scale the
burgeoning fields of microprocessors and biotechnology make little or no distinction
between pure and commercial research. The PhDs they employ and the Nobel Laureates they
retain as consultants accept that funding from Standard Oil and National Distillers means
that commercial criteria dictate what research they do and when/what to share with
colleagues and when to publish. It makes little difference whether one is working in the
university or in the new commercial firms in California, Switzerland or Britain. This is not the place to give an exhaustive history of the diminishing
mediations between science and industry. Our point is that the blinkered presentation of
science on TV depends on an historically outmoded conception of academic freedom and pure
research. What matters in social terms is the interrelations and mutual determinations
among the socio-economic and intellectual forces which evoke an area of inquiry and its
potential and real relations within the wider community. This should occur before it's all
sewn up. Instead of perpetuating a false and idealised conception of the scientists,
television could play an important role in the critical evaluation of the issues raised by
science. This means opening up the process of origination of new knowledge and
scrutinising the goals and purposes built in to research areas, machines, products and
procedures. Science and technology (literally) embody choices and priorities selected from
the manifold ways of ordering and using natural processes. In that sense, agenda-setting
and research policy determine what knowledge and priorities will be pursued. Television is
extremely important in this process since it has become the principal agenda setting
medium in our society as far as the general public is concerned. The more apparent it
becomes that science, technology and medicine are reconstituting our lives and work, the
more important it becomes to open up these manifestations of fixed capital and decide what
social relations we want embodied by and in them, before they become dead labour which it
is nearly impossible to revive. This concludes our sketch of the critical perspective from
which we approach current science on TV.
WHITE COAT, TEST TUBES AND A TALKING HEAD
We turn now to what we consider to be the characteristic televisual
styles and techniques for presenting science. The usual mode of presentation of a topic in
science is narrative, linear, expository and didactic. The course of the programme
alternates between voice-over and 'talking head'. A talking head is television's way of
saying 'this is brought directly to you without distortion or mediation'. In the case of
science programmes this form of presentation is usually reinforced by racks of test tubes
or an impressive piece of apparatus directly behind the talking head, a white lab coat or
other apparel, and the knowledge that we are being addressed by 'the top man (sic) in the
field' or the 'rising star'. The talking head is either directly addressing the camera or
speaking across camera to an unseen interviewer whose questions have been edited out. This
is in striking contrast with interviews on programmes where it is accepted that the issue
is controversial and open, to some minimal degree at least, to public scrutiny, doubt,
debate, etc; for example Panorama, Weekend World. In those programmes we see and
hear the interviewer and cut back and forth from interviewer to various protagonists,
speaking directly to one another, being challenged and arguing on camera. When scientists
disagree on television, one talking head is followed by another, and they are almost never
in direct conversation, much less in debate; e.g., Horizon, Open Secret. Similarly,
the telling of the story does not convey direct conflict but rather the solving of a
mystery, the fitting together of pieces of a puzzle. Stark disagreement is an interruption
in the plot line. Science and its telling are synonymous with progress and convey a sense
of authority and the advancing edge of objectivity. By these devices and conventions,
among others, a special status for scientific knowledge is assured. It is positivist in
that it privileges scientific knowledge above other forms of inquiry and in that it
separates facts from their contexts of meaning and represents them as above the battle of
competing interest groups and classes. When voice-over is employed, the characteristic tone is moderate,
assured, reasoned. It is appropriate to a 'community' which is presented as neutral,
objective, normally harmonious, disinterested and working for the good of humankind.
Humour, irony, paradox and rhetorical questioning are rare, as are invitations to the
viewer to dissent, criticise or respond. This mode of presentation, of audience
positioning, is epitomised in the voice of Paul Vaughan, Horizon's usual narrator:
even, dignified cultural celebration; familiar, evoking trust. Horizon is almost
the Wimbledon of science on TV, and Paul Vaughan is its Dan Maskell. This tone is common
to series across the arts and sciences. It is hegemonic in the precise sense that it
induces deference and organises consent by eliciting willingness to be the passive
recipient of versions of history organised and presented for our edification. Patient,
restrained, conveying in some cases real enthusiasm, but never shrill: Lord Clark,
Alistair Cooke, Jacob Bronowski, David Attenborough, James Burke, Brian Magee, Jonathan
Miller. It recalls the styles of presentation of Sir Isaiah Berlin and Lord Annan in the
arts and Sir Peter Medawar, Lord Ashby and Stephen J. Gould in science writing. It is in
sharp contrast to the hectoring 'Must-I-go-through-this-again' tone of explanation to a
wilfully slow pupil which characterises some politicians, e.g., Mrs Thatcher and MM
Callaghan and Healey. In the domain of science Patrick Moore and Magnus Pyke are atavistic
exceptions to highlight the norm. They harken back to a thirties and forties film
caricature of the eccentric absent-minded professor. Scientific and technological
interviewees are rarely pressed as others are by a (Sir!) Robin Day, Brian Widlake or
Brian Walden ('Let me put this to you, Minister . . .'). Indeed, since the questions are
usually edited out, the talking head has a clear, undisputed run. The technique used in
science interviewing is television's most permissive one, known as 'open-elicit'. The
interviewer simply asks a leading question and lets the tape run while the interviewee
gives his/her version of events. The interviewee's status and credibility are enhanced by
being allowed to construct the story and present it directly to camera, without
interruption or apparent mediation. In short, the conventions of television's presentation of science are
those of the informative lecture. The viewer is expected to be interested but
unsophisticated. This is made very obvious in the blockbuster programmes celebrating
Einstein's centenary. In both cases, the figure representing 'everyman', standing in for
the audience, was (male and) portrayed as a comical Dummkopf Peter Ustinov
in Nigel Calder's BBC epic and Dudley Moore in another BBC special covering similar
ground. The assumption (intention?) seems to be that the audience are not expected to
become more sophisticated as viewers of science, technology and medicine. The audience is
itself constructed as a group of simpletons to be 'better informed', which is not the same
thing as being challenged by subtle and demanding ways of presenting issues. Still less
does the prevailing mode of presentation invite genuine engagement or comment on the part
of the watching millions. All this is in contrast with the growing assumption that viewers can
deal with great variation in modes of presentation in films, drama series, spy stories,
westerns, cop shows: a degree of unexplained cutting, lack of resolution, paradox, irony,
comedy, etc. Admittedly, in radical representational terms, these don't go far, but it is
worth pondering that the makers of Kojak, and The Sweeney, Dallas, and Soap, not to mention ostensibly up-market offerings such as Pennies from Heaven and Tinker,
Tailor, Soldier, Spy, assume their audiences have a greater visual and plot
sophistication than the supposedly elite viewers of Horizon. In making this
comparison we do not want to imply that fictional programmes do not convey dominant
meanings, but the principal difference at work here is that between 'factual' and
'fictional' TV. The latter does not pretend to offer facts and can therefore allow the
viewer more 'freedom' within a complex of conventions and styles. 'Non-fiction' TV, of
which science programmes are the paradigm, claims to represent the facts. Therefore, any
ambiguity in the representation is seen as a failure of exposition. Science, of course, is
defined by the attempt to eliminate ambiguity. However, if the boundary between the
substance, context and social relations of science was relaxed, the camera could invite us
to draw our own conclusions and make observations on individuals and debates in the same
way that it does in other controversial areas. The existing conventions in science
programmes treat implicit or explicit ambiguities as a simple failure of exposition. We
would argue that by virtue of their adherence to the positivist notion of the 'fact' and
the notion of value-free objective activity, science programmes must demand a much more
rigid system of closure than do other TV genres. These assumptions do not leave questions
open to debate or to critical scrutiny of terms of reference. Thus, science broadcasting is 'educating' viewers in one sense
the nature of scientific 'progress' while firmly keeping them in the role of school
children in relation to visual and critical sophistication. It is also worth briefly
considering the other genres of 'factual' television. In sharp contrast to science
broadcasting which is only concerned with the complexities of finding, London Weekend
Television, for example, has made it a policy to upgrade their viewers' understanding of
current events by representing controversies as such, laying bare the complexities
of issues in opposition to TV's 'bias against understanding'. An attempt is made to avoid
premature closure, even though in the hands of producer David Cox and presenter Brian
Walden this technique has become threadbare. Indeed, a pioneer of this approach, Peter
Jay, claimed that this was one of the main aims in the planned programming of the new
franchise holder for breakfast television, TV-AM. Other programmes often clearly take
sides in areas of controversy, despite all kinds of journalistic ideologies to the
contrary. For example, Granada's World in Action, ATV's Vodka-Cola, and some
of Yorkshire TV's documentaries are powerfully partisan. Science broadcasting is unique in
remaining totally expository, 'neutral', above the battle and determinedly wary of
developments in visual presentation. Indeed, Horizon's Editor is quite candid in
avowing the extremely important role of talking heads and 'visual wallpaper' in the
series' format 'When in doubt, cut to a centrifuge or an analogous piece of
scientific equipment'.
FROM HORIZON, THE CULTURAL FLAGSHIP, TO TV POP SCIENCE
In the light of the above framework and critique, we want to look more
closely at certain programmes and series. Horizon has been for many years the
flagship of the BBC's fleet of science programmes. It came out of the Science and Features
Department, founded in 1963, neatly preempting the 'white heat' of Harold Wilson's
technological revolution. Science and Features also produces The Risk Business, Medical
Express, Young Scientist of the Year, The Great Egg Race, Tomorrow's World, Open Secret, and The Royal Institution Christmas Lectures, in addition to the major series
Calder, Bronowski, Leakey, Miller, Attenborough and various one-off documentaries. Most of the general remarks we have made above have had Horizon as
their primary reference point. The programme has been enormously influential, has been the
training ground of many producers of science programmes and is closely imitated by the
American programme Nova, where many of its refugees have gone to work. Since its
foundation in 1964, it has produced up to forty fifty-minute programmes per year. That's a
lot of miles of tape and film not to have broadened their horizons with. (It should be
added that in the 1980-81 Horizon series, their range of topics has widened but
that their approach remains the same.) This is not to say, of course, that the programme isn't excellent
within its own terms of reference. If one accepts those parameters, it is nonpareil, as
its offerings on endorphins, the Jupiter space mission, Earth's magnetism and 'The Cancer
Detectives of Lin Xian' have shown. Indeed, the last of these transcended Horizon's normal
brief by giving full weight to the social origins, labour process and relations of
research. It's just a pity that this radical approach was negated in the programme's
concluding statement. Instead of recognising the Chinese method of socio-medical research
as an implicit critique of Western medicine's dependence on prophylactic solutions, the
final contention was of an equivalence between them a sort of medical corollary of
detente. On the other hand, the series epitomises the existing approach in the
bulk of its production. Most of its producers exhibit a very deferential attitude towards
the self-conceptions of mandarin scientists. Within the department there is a surprisingly
naive enthusiasm for having access to the 'top man in the field', a source any Kuhnian
would suggest should at least be complemented by reference to dissenters from the reigning
paradigm. Similarly, reliance on the Scientific Consultative Committee ensures that, with
rare exceptions, only established approaches need apply. More significantly, the question
of how programme topics get chosen leads us back to a startlingly complacent source. We
are told by Horizon's Editor that they select themselves: 'There they are, staring
up at you in the literature' Nature and New Scientist are the
favourite sources of ideas. This puts them in close touch with a consensus and with the
latest developments but can hardly be said to take them beneath established views. In a recent Open University TV programme on how Horizon is made,
members of the production team displayed a remarkably facile and complacent view of their
approach:
Chris Pollitt: 'Despite difficulties, television producers do strive
for a particular conception of objectivity. At viewings like this one they aim to improve
accuracy, clarity and a favourite television word this "balance".
To achieve these aims Horizon itself needs to master its subject matter. You don't
carry in-house expertise, I mean neither you, for example, nor Chris, would be . . . ?'
Simon Campbell Jones: 'No. We have a fair amount of background
knowledge. I have made a nuclear programme of my own. Many other producers have made
programmes in this area, and a lot of discussion goes on in the club and in the canteen
and sort of up and down the corridors about what everybody is doing. And one can lean on
other people and get clues and ideas. It's basically getting contacts. And once you've got
into the sort of circuit, of scientists and people within a topic area, you then find that
you can more or less complete that circuit. By the time you've gone right round it, you
know that you've got everybody in that field.'
Here we have a repetition of the clichés of television objectivity
coupled with a description of research methodology which falls a long way short of
aggressively seeking out non-establishment views. Significantly, the Horizon team are very preoccupied with
retaining the good will of the scientific community and don't often go in for hard hitting
analyses unless the topic is already an established scandal. Even there, in the case of
the IQ controversy, they are preoccupied with whether or not it's 'good science', where
the real point at issue in this case is the ideological power of a particularly
influential form of scientism which legitimates social and racial hierarchies by
'scientific' means. We asked a Horizon researcher about their relations with the
growing community of people who think, do research and make critical stands on the
history, philosophy and social relations of science as well as the new disciplines such as
science policy, 'science, technology and society', bioethics, technology assessment. He
replied, 'We have no regard for that community.' When taxed about this, he made it very
clear that it was the scientific community, not the people who think about science,
to which Horizon directs its attention. Nor do they give much credence to the
explicitly critical perspectives of political pressure groups who are concerned with
science. They may present issues raised by media orientated Friends of the Earth, but not
by the British Society for Social Responsibility in Science and associated groups such as
Health and Safety, Politics of Health, Radical Science Journal, Socialist
Environment and Resources Association, Network for Alternative Technology and Technology
Assessment. Born in the wake of the Pilkington Committee's recommendations that science
should be more prominent on television (1961), Horizon epitomises the existing
approach and influences its 2-5 million audience week after week. Two science programmes aimed at a 'mass audience' are placed in
strategic slots. Tomorrow's World, founded in 1967, falls between Nation wide and
Top of the Pops, with the result that it has 8-l0 million viewers. Its presenters are very
clean and wholesome. Originally Raymond Baxter, and now the current team of Michael Rodd,
Judith Hann and Kieran Prendiville, represent the best of their respective generations.
Baxter was a Spitfire pilot who savoured the Merlin engine in a retrospective, nostalgic
programme on Rolls Royce, while the new team convey the achievements and enthusiasm of a
keen grammar school meritocracy. The programme's pace and tone are no accident. The
originator of the series, Aubrey Singer, who went on to become Controller of BBC 2 and
then BBC radio, is reported to have said that the response he desired was an awed 'Gee
Whiz!' from the viewer after every item. Dazzle them with the glossy, shiny end-products
of science, wrapped up in a wholesome, pastel-coloured package, but ensure that they don't
have to think much about what they're marvelling at. The emphasis is on progress, and
questioning and criticism are rare. There isn't much difference either between Raymond Baxter's nostalgic
patriotism and the new format and team of presenters. When Tomorrow's World wanted
to underline the importance of engineering in the wake of the Finniston Report, they
didn't wheel out any of the entrepreneurs of the new NEB-sponsored microchip firms or the
winner of the Nobel Prize for inventing the body scanner. We were treated instead to
Michael Rodd reverentially interviewing HRH The Prince of Wales who professed to know
little about it, though he was sure it was important, and was glad to be Hon. something or
other to the relevant society and to encourage young people to take up engineering as a
career, since creativity, invention and enterprise are essential to Britain's future
prosperity. The facelift which Tomorrow's World underwent when Raymond Baxter
departed has left it with a visage which is shallow and flashy. It is offering a very
straight version of the meritocratic dream to young people awaiting Top of the Pops
a sort of technological version of Pan's People or Legs & Co. In the
current economic climate this borders on the socially obscene. There is no regular ITV equivalent, but for thirteen weeks in the
summer, slotted between Crossroads and Coronation Street, Yorkshire TV
brings us Don't Just Sit There, a programme which represents a significant and
at least in its intentions in some ways laudable negotiation of the
relationship between science and the 'public'. In 1974 the IBA said that they wanted more
factual programmes to go out before 9pm. Most of the ITV companies were stumped, but the
Controller of Yorkshire TV complied and came up with Don't Ask Me, which had the
unusual feature that viewers were invited to send in questions. The programme makers were
seeking outside stimuli; Austin Mitchell was the compere; Rob Buckman and Magnus Pyke were
the experts who gave the answers. The model was the Victorian science lecture, and
although the format worked in TV terms, it still left a polarisation of us v. them.
They spent two more years developing a different format, and David Bellamy came up with a
model more like the Victorian scientific society, with the studio and viewing audiences
taking a much more active part. Where Horizon provides elitist cultural celebration
without apparent mediation between 'top men' and the consumer, and Tomorrow's World issues
an invitation to help re-tool Britain for the glossy, meritocratic future, Don't Just
Sit There is avowedly mundane and populist. Its presenters are all shameless hams: Rob
Buckman or Miriam Stoppard (medical), David Bellamy (botanical/zoological) and Magnus Pyke
(physical), though these demarcations are not strictly followed. The pace is manic, often
zany, driven by Pyke's delivery, with props and hearty fun reminiscent of It's a
Knockout. For all its hucksterism, it has two great merits. First, it invites the
viewers and studio audiences to raise questions, suggest research projects and propose and
work on their own answers though not to raise issues or debate problems. The format
doesn't invite topics which can't be handled snappily, and an undisguised facticity
pervades the whole spectacle. Second, it makes a serious effort to demystify expert
knowledge in general and specific ways, particularly through analogy. The knock-about
atmosphere is attractively irreverent, in contrast to Horizon where the theme music
and tone invite one into the cathedral of science. Its explanations are, on the whole,
accessible. The programme does, however, display the contradictions of populism. On the
one hand, the invitation to participate is genuine, and people are drawn in: 'We want you,
the viewer, to actively help us understand the science of everyday things and make them
more interesting'. The viewers propose topics and supply their own ingenious answers as
well as data for the nationwide surveys, e.g., on rainfall, geographical distribution of
types of cats or rats, outrageous kinds of wines, home-made synthetic rubber, ways of
drying lettuce, problems with heart pacemakers, what makes a hula hoop return when skidded
across the floor, cures for babies who won't sleep, ways of identifying the contents of
unlabelled cans without opening them. The format precludes controversial social,
industrial and educational issues and concentrates heavily on the domestic sphere. On the
other hand, the resident experts act as judges in the contests and as explainers of just
what scientific principles are being illustrated. Us v. them is less in the
foreground compared with the earlier format of the series, but the current one remains
patronising. The presenters tend to give with one hand and take back with the other as
they cut short the participants' exposition and announce what the medical or physical law
or symptom is. It is almost as though they cannot refrain from protesting that the
programme's format is in danger of upstaging their own expertise (David Bellamy suffered
least from this anxiety) . One is reminded of Socrates in the Platonic Dialogues, speaking
at great length and then asking the rhetorical question, as when he proves to the slave
boy in 'The Meno' that he already knows the Pythagorean Theorem. The audience is, in the
end, in the hands of the 'experts', even though the interaction is less pompous and
authoritarian than in other science programmes. In the last analysis the 'participation'
seen here is ersatz, a carefully manufactured glimpse of more democratic
possibilities. Indeed, the production staff told us that the presenters' expertise was
itself only a PR role, since it could lead to difficulties if, say, Pyke and Stoppard
pitted their knowledge against what the producers wanted them to say. Their role is that
of actors but with expert qualifications to lend legitimacy to their performances.
THE DRAMATIC CONSTRUCTION OF GENIUS
The other series we want to consider at length is the impressive and
lavishly produced The Voyage of Charles Darwin. We were, like everyone else,
enthralled and impressed by the photography, the acting, the attention to period detail,
and above all the attempt to portray an intellectual odyssey in dramatic terms. The trick
was done, however, at a high price. Both the socio-economic and the intellectual contexts
were simply edited out, and we were left with a dramatically successful but historically
simplistic opposition between Captain Fitzroy's biblical literalism about the Divine
creation of species and Darwin's putative inductivism leading to the theory of evolution
by natural selection. Fossil facts discovered on the voyage, species differences
encountered in the Galapagos islands these, we are told, led the humble naturalist
to his discovery. This nice young man comes across as the quintessence of English
empiricism. What, then, were the questions which were unasked? Why, for example,
was The Beagle charting the coast of South America with such great care in the
first place? Why did Britain want to know so much? What were the economic, geopolitical
and cartographic desiderata which created the expedition? What was the intellectual
context within which Darwin conducted his studies? We get no hint that Darwin learned
Lamarck's theory of evolution while still a student at Edinburgh and little indication
that his own grandfather had published a much discussed evolutionary theory in 1794. We
see Darwin given Volume I of Lyell's Principles of Geology, but we are not told of
its crucial bearing on the question of the origin of species. We do not see Volume II
reach him in Montevideo, with its early chapters reviewing the issue of evolution with
great care. Darwin had a working library on The Beagle, but there is no sign of it.
Instead of these important indicators of his intellectual milieu, we see him tramping
about, puzzling over myriad findings. This is, of course, half the story but only
half. Similarly, after his return to England, we learn nothing of the contemporary debate
over evolutionism. In the year when Darwin wrote out the first extended version of his
theory, the evolutionism in Robert Chambers' Vestiges of the Natural History of
Creation (1844) was a cause célèbre, but we hear nothing of it. Similarly, in
Darwin's own musings the theories of scarcity and of the interactions between people and
nature loom very large. The ideas of Malthus on the relationship between nature's
resources and population growth were central to both the socio-economic context and the
scientific one. They were the basis of the 1834 Poor Law and a key influence on Darwin's
thinking in the weeks of 1838 when he first focused on the mechanism of natural selection.
We sketch these matters in some detail to highlight the contrast
between two sorts of verisimilitude in the making of the series. There were maritime and
historical advisers. The maritime adviser's injunctions were deferred to, down to the
finest detail. The historical adviser on the other hand, was listened to with care when he
pointed out that the script presented a version of events which was in no way true to
history not even to Darwin's own Autobiography, which the production team claimed
to be following. Their main source was a personal reminiscence written from memory for his
grandchildren years later and never intended for publication. The adviser argued that a
much more interesting story could be told which took greater account of the intellectual
and other contexts. The episodes were even re-written, but in the end he was overruled.
The historical adviser was given the option of removing his name from the credits. The
reason given was that 'dramatic criteria' called for a more stark, simpler version, which
was supplied by re-writes from the producer and director, Christopher Ralling and Martin
Friend. Dramatic criteria (and the requirements of us co-producers) had also led them to
bring forward the maritime aspect, stress the suicide of the previous captain of The
Beagle and build up Fitzroy's part far beyond his role in Darwin's later life. This
was done to keep up the opposition between them throughout the series. It is our opinion
that the deference to appearances (a strictly empiricist notion of authenticity) and the
tradition of tele-dramas based on life at sea in the Victorian era led to the deference to
the maritime adviser. One is reminded of The Onedin Line which was also directed by
Martin Friend, whose experience in that series and knowledge of Spanish were important
advantages. The tradition of valuing dramatic qualities above scientific ones (a function
of the pecking order within the hierarchy of British culture and of TV in particular) and
failing to increase the sophistication of viewers about the complexities of science, made
it possible (and perfectly permissable) to play fast and loose with the scientific,
socio-economic and intellectual aspects. We end up with a dramatically successful,
ideologically loaded portrayal of the lone genius pitted against the forces of ignorance
and superstition, which no student of science or history could take seriously. An
important opportunity was missed, and a version of science and its social relations which
is of no critical use in our culture was propagated. The naive inductivism and empiricism
attributed to Darwin are truly embarrassing. The series resurrects a feature of dominant
ideology which even its conservative proponents (e.g., Sir Karl Popper) have transcended.
It is true that Darwin once said that he proceeded according to true Baconian principles,
collecting facts with no theory in mind. But he also said that everyone knows that a fact
has to count for or against some theory or other to have any meaning. Once again, we only
get half the story. The producer of the series, Christopher Ralling, went on to become Head
of BBC Documentaries. In a lecture that he gave at the American Film Institute
inaugurating a season under the title 'Salute to the BBC', he gave this breathtakingly
banal version of his ground rules: ' 1. Never invent a major scene which did not actually
take place. 2. Always use the actual words if they are available. 3. Whenever possible use
the actual geographical locations' (Listener, 10 January 1980, p. 43). Once again,
it is undeniable that these principles have produced very effective television within the
bounds of TV naturalism, which is itself a version of empiricism, unable to go beyond
surface appearances. This was especially true in the location filming and in the
expression of actual words in a 'natural' way. But which words? Which locations? Which
scenes? The list is deceptively straightforward, ignoring the ways in which historians
select events and construct their meanings. History remains unproblematically transparent.
The list is also too short. It ignores wider historical forces, intellectual and
ideological movements. It is, in short, a positivistic account, treating facts as though
they were separable from the network of meanings which give them life and historical
efficacy. Similarly, the metaphysical and theological issues are reduced to a conflict
between 'science' and 'religion' which recent scholarship on the period has set aside. The
upshot is a half admirable attempt to present an intellectual odyssey dramatically. It did
this only by traducing the very richness which gave Darwinism meaning in nineteenth
century history. It reduces the complex determinations of his life, works and milieu to a
decontextualised individualist inductivism and presents these within the conventions of
narrative naturalism. The American co-producers could insist that something very dramatic
happen before the American viewer could change channels; the maritime adviser could call
for changes in uniform or rigging; the historical adviser was simply overruled and
ignored. How can this the finest rendition of science on TV do for us what
culture should: help us to discriminate more subtly and sensitively among the facts and
values which make up our lives? How might a radical science programme-making strategy approach the life
and work of Charles Darwin? One essential starting-point would be the necessary break with
the ideological division between 'factual' and 'fictional' television within the
time-honoured but nonsensical distinction between drama and documentary. All TV is
a selected, constructed process of representation, as is all investigation of nature. We
cannot, of course, elaborate a total strategy here, but the foregoing critique obviously
delineates the sorts of things we would not do, the devices we would not adopt. What
follows is more an approach than a set of programme directions. It would be absolutely essential to break with the chronological,
naturalistic narrative which Ralling adopted in taking us through Darwin's intellectual
odyssey. Such a form is completely incapable of dealing with a complex set of historical
determinations and almost automatically sites historical causality within the confines of
one heroic individual Any understanding of Darwin as a historical product in the
nineteenth century and as a historical subject today has to set aside Ralling's absolutist
view of Darwin's own texts as having some kind of immanent meaning, apart from their
appropriation by his reviewers, protagonists, antagonists and a whole series of
socio-political, intellectual and cultural discourses in his own period and in our own.
One could start with his texts, possibly his notebooks in late 1838, when he was beginning
to formulate clearly the theory of natural selection. However, even starting from such
texts, one would constantly move backwards and forwards, referring continually to his
precursors and antecedents, attempting to build up the complexity of the
social/economic/intellectual/political network of articulations in which he found himself
and which constructed him. It would be important to make clear that the meaning of what he
wrote was a synthetic appropriation of the debates into which he intervened. We disagree
fundamentally with Ralling's chosen approach to Darwin, which is to privilege Darwin's own
retrospective account of himself and to move all the way from Darwin's texts to a
naturalised, dramatic reconstruction which then obscures their relative nature, their own
historicity. We would wish to highlight and literally display the texts within the
production, in a way which sets them against contemporary and current discourses. A
powerful model for our chosen form of historical film making is provided by Film and
History Project's Song of the Shirt, which we recommend to readers and to TV
science and history documentarists alike and which through its inter-discursive, dynamic
representation of women garment workers in the 1840s, outside the usual naturalistic
framework, succeeds in pointing up the relative, ideologically circumscribed positions of
the tellers of history. There is no loss, and many would argue considerable gain, in
dramatic effectiveness. Similar problems arise with respect to the BBC series Oppenheimer, written
by Peter Prince and directed by Barry Davies (see Gardner, 1980). This dramatised account
of the fortunes of the 'father of the atom bomb' employed the same narrative strategies as The Voyage of Charles Darwin to broadly similar effect. It worked through a process
of identification with Oppenheimer, 'the man' at the centre of the story. All the enormous
social, economic and political questions surrounding the invention of the bomb had
consequently to be subsumed and explained through personalised 'dramatic' incidents
involving Oppenheimer himself. The producer is quite candid about this approach: 'Drama
allows you to explore what it was like to be Oppenheimer'. The writer had one rule of
thumb in selecting which incidents to dramatise: 'If it concerns Oppenheimer it's more
important than if it has general importance but doesn't concern Oppenheimer directly'.
This guideline led to some strange omissions and compressions of history. Pearl Harbour,
the first nuclear reaction in Fermi's pile, Einstein's personal intervention with
Roosevelt are all missing moments in the drama. Perhaps more importantly, the context in
which the twenty-year span of the drama takes place is subsumed and almost completely
unexplained. In particular there is no accounting for the generalised attraction of
intellectuals to the Communist Party in the 1930s (for very good reasons) and the
anti-communist hysteria of McCarthyism in the late 1950s. These are not incidental details
which can be taken for granted as part of a current audience's knowledge of the period.
But a dramatised, personalised account, such as this, cannot halt or digress for such
prosaic niceties. Taking Oppenheimer as its centre, then, historical and political
conflict on a large scale are necessarily (give the chosen form) worked out through a
series of confrontations with his wife Kitty, with Edward Teller, Jane Tatlock,
General Groves, various security personnel, McCarthy's henchmen. This is an extremely
limited attempt to humanise history and relies for its effect on the employment of a
well-known typography of almost stereotypical dramatic characters. For instance, one has
the bitchy wife, the suicidal, neurotic mistress, the bullying, authoritarian military
man, the humiliated adjutant who seeks revenge, the loyal retainers, the lawyer of
integrity, etc. All these are portrayed as almost essential human types who ricochet
around the fully-rounded Oppenheimer at the centre of events. Such an approach as this precludes the vitally important materialistic
view of history as the resolution of forces. History becomes, instead, one man's moral
dilemma, a position in which the audience is inscribed and forced to adopt. In the whole
process of the invention of the bomb there are a host of social, political and economic
forces at work which this personal conflict and drama can come nowhere near suggesting.
The birth of the bomb was achieved through the most extraordinary harnessing of financial
and scientific power on an international scale. Competition between key institutions was
temporarily halted and collaboration imposed. Financial provision was limitless. Huge
industrial and research complexes, including Los Alamos, were built at breakneck speed.
Over 250,000 people were eventually mobilised to wipe out 152,000 at Hiroshima and
Nagasaki. Perhaps only US capital at its most dynamic and ebullient could have achieved
this in the time-span available. Yet these enormous processes, this gigantic scale of
co-operation and effort, simply cannot be conveyed within the scenario of personal drama
surrounding a single individual, important as he was. Such a preferred narrative approach
as this cannot help but imply wrongly that individuals are the central
agents of history. History, as Marx said, is made by individuals but not under conditions
of their own choosing. Its portrayal cannot be reduced to the small change of domestic and
workplace tittle-tattle. One is consequently forced to ask, as with the Darwin series,
what could one have done instead? Within the broad framework of selected personal and
dramatised sequences, one would want to adopt a broadly inter-discursive approach which
mixes genres and attempts to portray the changing of historical forces through a range of
televisual devices. For example, at certain points within the dramatic narrative, one
could break off to use more orthodox documentary devices and sequences of exposition One
could continually shift the point of view within which the audience is positioned so that
they are able to explore the various aspects of this historical dilemma. One could
get the audience to examine in Brechtian fashion, as opposed to being forced to identify
with the central persona of Oppenheimer and his own restricted perspective and network of
personal relationships. One can see that while politically such a method is eminently more
desirable, suggesting a genuinely materialistic dramaturgy, it would demand a break with
the shibboleths of orthodox TV drama. Among the most important of these are the
maintenance of narrative unity and tension, involvement and identification with the
characters, immersion in the plot and suspension of disbelief. However, one can see from
this brief analysis how such devices, so beloved of TV, are not simply neutral and useful
means of telling a good story. They are, on the contrary, ideological techniques which
actually preclude the representation of the full range of proximate and distant
determinations which make up a materialist history.
CONCLUSION: A MODEL
We would like to see the domain of science opened up in at least three
ways. First, sources: what forces evoke and constitute the kind of questions, frameworks
and specific priorities of science? How do we come to frame the manifold of nature in the
ways that we do? This topic goes as wide as asking why biology is currently framed in
terms of information, communication, coding and control and as narrow as looking into how
foundations and research councils prioritise their grant giving. Here is a list of
research areas which were initially funded on a large scale for military purposes and are
currently being employed in ways which produce real subordination in the sphere of
production: nuclear power, computing, transistors, microprocessors, numerical control of
machines, containerised transport, rocketry, electronic voice recognition. It would be
enlightening to see the origins, development and applications in a single framework. Second, the labour process: what are the relations of production of
science, technology and medicine? The materials of labour or raw materials, the means of
labour or means of production, the human labour or purposive human activity these
are the elements of any labour process, and science should also be closely examined in
these terms. The social process of the production of knowledge, research and development
of new technologies and products, the process of experimentation and testing of new drugs
and medical procedures are in need of closer analysis. The division of labour in the lab,
who does what in which social arrangements, the career structure all these are part
of the understanding of the social relations of science. It is, if you like, the bringing
of anthropology to the workplace of scientific production. This is a process which has
been begun in Bruno Latour and Steve Woolgar's Laboratory Life: The Social Construction
of Scientific Facts (1979). The social study of factory work and life has been
subjected to close scrutiny in this way. Why not science? Third, articulations: how do the results connect up with the rest of
society? A Horizon programme called 'The Fight to be Male' appears without any
consideration of the relationship between its arguments about a 'sex centre' in the brain
and the issues raised about sex and gender by the feminist and gay movements. To be sure,
the social or environmentalist explanations were mentioned, but only as alternatives,
bordering on straw men. The 'impact' of chips or transplant surgery should not be
separated from the description of the hardware and techniques. Matters internal to science
are not separable from their social relations. When Jonathan Miller placed himself in
sensory isolation in The Body in Question, he only spoke of its relationship with
the senses and bodily well-being. He made no reference to the development and use of
sensory deprivation largely in military and security forces interrogation
even though it was a matter of contemporary news. Similarly, when he spoke of blood
transfusions as part of an anthropological 'gift relationship', he made no mention of the
common sale of blood for sustenance by the poor, alcoholics or drug addicts. Only the
body, as a discrete entity, was in question, not the social relations of the body of
medical knowledge, much less the mode of production into which bodies are inserted. It
could, of course, be argued that we have had an orgy of articulations in James Burke's
series Connections. There is some truth in that, but his frenetic accounts tend to
be merely connections. He celebrates the association of ideas in an idiosyncratic
manner, unrelated to the forces and contradictions which evoke research and the
resolutions of forces which research projects embody. We advocate an approach which keeps all three themes in relation to
each other: sources or constitution, labour processes or social relations of production,
articulations or contextual relations. Our purpose in advocating a different approach to
science on TV is to open up the process of origination of new facts, artifacts and
procedures to public scrutiny and debate. As things now stand, we are faced with them at
the point of impact when they are so highly developed and/or capitalised that it is
difficult to believe that a real democratic process is possible. Glancing, in conclusion, at the labour process of television itself,
one side effect of our approach would be to undermine the existing division of labour in
broadcasting and to reconstitute the totality of relations which make up science,
technology, medicine and their representation to the general public. If these are as
important as we have argued them to be, the ways in which they are treated by television
become a central question of society and culture, and the alteration of current modes of
representation becomes an important project for those who wish to change the structure of
society. Popular Film and Television: A Reader, edited by Tony Bennett,
Susan Boyd-Bowman, Colin Mercer and Janet Woollacott. London: BFI Publishing in
association with The Open University Press, 1981, pp. 171-93.
References
Dickson, D. (1974), Alternative Technology and the Politics of
Technical Change,London: Fontana. Dunn, R. G. (1979), 'Science, Technology and
Bureaucratic Domination: Television and the Ideology of Scientism', Media, Culture and
Society, no. 1. Figlio, K. (1978), 'Chlorosis and Chronic Disease in Nineteenth-century
Britain: the Social Constitution of Somatic Illness in a Capitalist Society', Social
History, no. 3. Figlio, K. (1979), 'Sinister Medicine? A Critique of Left Approaches to
Medicine', Radical Science Journal, no. 9. Foucault, M. (1970), The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the
Human Sciences, London: Tavistock. Foucault, M. (1971), Madness and Civilisation: A History of Insanity
in the Age of Reason, London: Tavistock. Foucault, M. (1973), The Birth of the Clinic: An Archaeology of
Medical Perception, London: Tavistock. Gardner, C. (1978), 'Blinding with Science', Time Out, 20-26
October 1978. Gardner, C. (ed.) (1979), Media, Politics and Culture: A Socialist
View, London: Macmillan. Gardner, C. (1980), 'One Man's Bomb', Time Out, 24-30 October
1980. Jones, G., Connell, I, Meadows, J. (1977), The Presentation of
Science by the Media, University of Leicester Primary Communications Research Centre. Kellner, D. (1979), 'TV, Ideology and Emancipatory Popular Culture', Socialist
Review, no. 45, May/June 1979. Kuhn, T. (1971), The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 2nd
ed., Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Latour, B. and Woolgar, S. (1979), Laboratory Life: The Social
Construction of Scientific Facts, New York: Russell Sage. Mattelart, A. (1979), Multinational Corporations and the Control of
Culture: The Ideological Apparatuses of Imperialism, Hassocks: Harvester Press. Popper, K. (1963), Conjectures and Refutations: The Growth of
Scientific Knowledge, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. Ralling, C. (1980), 'What Is Television Doing to History?', Listener, 10 January 1980. Webster, F. and Robins, K. (1979), 'Mass Communications and
"Information Technology" ', in Miliband, R. and Saville, J. (eds.), The
Socialist Register, London: Merlin. Young, R. (1973), 'The Historiographic and Ideological Contexts of the
Nineteenth-century Debate on Man's Place in Nature', in Teich, M. and Young, R. (eds.), Changing
Perspectives in the History of Science: Essays in Honour of Joseph Needham, London:
Heinemann. Young, R. (1977), 'Science is Social Relations', Radical Science
Journal, no. 5. Young, R. (1979a), 'Science is a Labour Process', Science for
People, nos. 43/44. Young, R. (1979b), 'Science as Culture', Quarto, December 1979.
Checklist of Films and Television Programmes
The Body in Question (BBC) November 1978.
The Clone Affair (BBC) May 1979.
Connections (BBC) October 1978.
Einsteins Universe (BBC) March 1979.
Horizon (BBC): 'Sweet Solutions' March 1979 'The Real Bionic Man' April 1979. 'The Fight to be Male' May 1979 'The Mexican Oil Dance' September 1979. 'The Fat in the Fire' December 1979.
'The Cancer Detectives of Lin Xian' February 1980.
Man Alive (BBC): 'Fats and Figures' January 1980.
Oppenheimer (BBC) October 1980.
Screening Nuclear Hazard (OU/BBC) June 1980.
The Voyage of Charles Darwin (BBC) October 1978 The Song of the Shirt (Film and History Project), dir. Sue Clayton
and Jonathan Curling, distributed by The Other Cinema.
Address for correspondence: 26 Freegrove Road, London N7 9RQ
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk