Siân Nicholas

TEDxAberystwyth 2021 speaker

Dr Siân Nicholas is Reader in Modern British History at Aberystwyth University, where she specialises in modern British history, in particular the social history of the First and Second World Wars, and the history of the mass media, especially the press and broadcasting. She studied History at the University of Cambridge and Political Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, before completing her DPhil thesis at the University of Oxford.

Siân’s talk for TEDxAberystwyth will focus on learnings we can take from the WWII about the food security and sustainability.

Sian Nicholas | TEDxAberystwyth 2020 speaker announcement

Siân’s main research specialism is the history of the mass media in twentieth century Britain, with specific reference to the press and broadcasting in the Second World War. Her doctoral thesis was a study of the BBC’s role in maintaining home front morale in the Second World War. Since then her research interests have expanded to include the social role of broadcasting in the early years of the BBC, the history of the British press in war and peace, media and the construction of national identity, and ‘intermediality’, i.e., the institutional, personal and creative links between different mass media in the first half of the twentieth century. Siân is currently completing a major research project on the British press in the Second World War, funded by the Leverhulme Trust.

Additionally, Siân is co-founder and co-Director of the Aberystwyth Centre for Media History, an Honorary Associate of the Macquarie University Centre for Media History and a Life Member of the International Association of Media and History (IAMHIST); she is also a former editor and current Advisory Board member of the journal Twentieth Century British History, and on the Editorial Board of the journal Media History. Most recently, she was Principal Investigator on the major three-year team research project funded by the Leverhulme Trust: A Social and Cultural History of the British Press in the Second World War

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