Censorship in Irish Broadcasting

Aleksandra Mirek-Rogowska

Abstract


Can we say that any legislation concerning broadcasting is a form of censorship? Where does the censorship start? The present article discusses these questions in the context of broadcast media in Ireland. In Irish broadcasting there was a tendency to support a dominant ideology. It was creating a culture of censorship which some found acceptable, yet others were forced to accept. There were many factors (history, the development of Irish broadcasting, government and the Church) that can be associated with forming restriction of language in media. The Irish radio was based on the BBC model and all news from Ireland was filtered by a British news agency. At the same time, Irish broadcasting has been an integral part of a government department, and could be controlled by them regarding who and when would be listening. Until the second half of the twentieth century, the Catholic Church had a huge impact on Irish media. It was considered the guardian of morality and defined demoralization and had an influence on shaping the Irish public opinion. Establishing such a strong position would allow them to control broadcasting. Since the 1960s, the power of Catholic Church has decreased; nevertheless, the government still had control of and influence over broadcasting in Ireland. In 1960 they legislated the Broadcasting Authority Act, with the most controversial Section 31, which allowed the government control of all media. However, restricting the media caused journalists to oppose and fight for their freedom of speech.


Keywords


censorship; Irish broadcasting; Section 31; Broadcasting Authority Act; Catholic Church; Pirate Radio; Silencing project’

Full Text:

PDF

References


“Indirect Censorship of Radio Programs”. 1931. The Yale Law Journal. 40(6). Accessed March 31, 2018. http://www.jstor.org/stable/789883.

Barbrook, Richard. 1992. “Broadcasting and National Identity in Ireland”, Media, Culture & Society. 144(2): 203-227.

Brennan, Cathal. 2011. The Anti-Jazz Campaign, Accessed December 10, 2018. http://www.theirishstory.com/2011/07/01/the-anti-jazz-campaign.

Broadcasting Authority (Amendment) Act .1976. Accessed March 31, 2018. Http://Www.Irishstatutebook.Ie/Eli/1976/Act/37/Enacted/En/Print#sec16.

Broadcasting Authority Act 1960 (Section 31). 1997 S.I. No. 7/1977,

Broadcasting Authority Act. 1960. Accessed March 31, 2018. Http://Www.Irishstatutebook.Ie/Eli/1960/Act/10/Enacted/En/Print#sec31.

Censorship of Films Act .1923. Accessed December 31, 2018. http://www.irishstatutebook.ie/eli/1923/act/23/enacted/en/html.

Cooney, John. 2000. John Charles McQuaid: Ruler of Catholic Ireland. Dublin: O’Brien Press Ltd.

Feeney, Peter .1984. ‘Censorship and RTE’, The Crane Bag. 8(2): 61-64, Accessed December 31, 2018. http://www.jstor.org/stable/30023278.

Fisher, Desmond. 2005. ‘Getting tough with RTE’. In Political censorship and the democratic state: the Irish broadcasting ban, eds. Mark O'Brien and Mary P. Corcoran, 61-72. Dublin: Four Courts Press.

Gorham, Maurice. 1967. Forty Years of Irish Broadcasting. Dublin: Talbot.

Harcup, Tony. 2014. A dictionary of journalism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Healy, John. 2011. From Catholic Republic to Secular State: The Secularisation of Ireland and the Debate on Church Patronage of State Education. Accessed November 10, 2016: https://www.academia.edu/14105372/From_Catholic_Republic_to_Secular_State_The_secularisation_of_Ireland_and_the_debate_on_church_patronage_of_state_education_.

Horgan, John. 2001. Irish media: a critical history since 1922. London: Routledge.

Horgan, John. 2002. “Journalists and Censorship: a case history of the NUJ in Ireland and the broadcasting ban 1971-94”. Journalism Studies. 3(3): 377-392. Accessed March 10, 2018: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14616700220145605.

Inglis, Tom. 1998. Moral Monopoly: The Rise and Fall of the Catholic Church in Modern Ireland. 2nd ed. University College Dublin.

Kenny, Colum .2005. “Censorship, not ‘self-censorship’”. In Political censorship and the democratic state: the Irish broadcasting ban, eds. Mark O'Brien and Mary P. Corcoran, 73-85. Dublin: Four Courts Press.

Leitrim Observer . 1934a. 6th January.

Leitrim Observer .1934b. 20th January.

Lowe, Simon. 2012. “The Ten Commandments as Our Code: Media Censorship in 20th Century Ireland”. Socheolas: Limerick Student Journal of Sociology, Vol. 3(2). February, Accessed December 31, 2018. https://ulsites.ul.ie/sociology/sites/default/files//sociology_The%2010%20Commandments.pdf.

Lynch, Brian. 2000. “Broadcasting and the Church, 1926-1951”. New Hibernia Review / Iris Éireannach Nua. 4(2): 26-39. Accessed March 31, 2018. http://www.jstor.org/stable/20557650.

Merriam Webster Dictionary. 2018. Accessed March 31, 2018. Https://Www.Merriam-webster.Com/Dictionary/Censorship /.

Morash, Chris. 2010. A history of the media in Ireland. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Mulryan, Peter.1988. Radio, Radio: the Story of Independent, Community and Pirate Radio in Ireland,.Dublin: Borderline Publications.

Noelle- Neumann, Elisabeth. 2004. Spirala Milczenia. Poznań: Zysk i S-ka Wydawnictwo.

Ó hAllmhuráin, Gearóid. 2005. “Dancing on the Hobs of Hell: Rural Communities in Clare and the Dance Hall Act of 1935”. New Hibernia Review, Iris Éireannach Nua. Vol. 9( 4).

O’Brien, Conor Cruise. 2005. “Broadcasting and violence: the case for media restriction”. In Political censorship and the democratic state: the Irish broadcasting ban, ed. Mark O'Brien and Mary P. Corcoran, 23-33. Dublin: Four Courts Press.

O’Brien, Mark. 2005. “Disavowing democracy: the silencing project in the South”. In Political censorship and the democratic state: the Irish broadcasting ban, eds. Mark O'Brien and Mary P. Corcoran, 48-59. Dublin: Four Courts Press.

O’Neil, Brian. 2000. “Lifting the veil: the arts, broadcasting and Irish society”, Media, Culture & Society, 144(2): 763-785.

Oxford University Press . 2018. Accessed March 31, 2018. Https://En.Oxforddictionaries.Com/Definition/Censorship.

Pettitt, Lance. 2002. Screening Ireland: Film and Television Representation, Manchester University Press.

Purcell, Betty. 1991. “The silence in Irish Broadcasting” . In The Media and Northern Ireland: covering the troubles, ed. Bill Rolston, 51-68. Basingstoke: Macmillan.

Scannell, Paddy and Cardiff, David. 1991. A social History of British Broadcasting: Volume One, 1922-39. Oxford: Blackwell.

Smyth, Jim. 1993. “Dancing Depravity and all that Jazz: The Public Dancehalls Act of 1935”, History Ireland, Vol. 1(2): 51-54.

Westergaard, John and Resler, Henrietta. 1975. Class In A Capitalist Society: A Study Of Contemporary Britain. London: Heineman Educational Books.

What Is Censorship? . 2018. Accessed March 31, 2018. Https://Www.Aclu.Org/Other/What-censorship /.

White, Alex. 2005. “Section 31: ministerial orders and court challenges”. In Political censorship and the democratic state: the Irish broadcasting ban, eds. Mark O'Brien and Mary P. Corcoran, 34-47. Dublin: Four Courts Press.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/nh.2019.4.118-129
Date of publication: 2019-09-13 22:32:47
Date of submission: 2019-01-15 21:15:55


Statistics


Total abstract view - 1125
Downloads (from 2020-06-17) - PDF - 0

Indicators



Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2019 Aleksandra Elżbieta Mirek-Rogowska

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.