9th Edition

Power Without Responsibility Press, Broadcasting and the Internet in Britain

By James Curran, Jean Seaton Copyright 2025
    582 Pages
    by Routledge

    582 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book attacks the conventional history of the press as a story of progress; offers a critical defence and history of public service broadcasting; provides a myth-busting account of the internet; a subtle account of the impact of social media and explores key debates about the role and politics of the media.

     

    Power Without Responsibility has become a standard book on media and other courses: but it has also gone beyond an academic audience to reach a wider public. Hailed as a book that has ‘cracked the canon’ by the Times Higher, it has been translated into five languages. In 2019, the text gained the International Communication Fellows’ ‘classic book’ Award. This ninth edition is based on a major overhaul of its content to take account of new developments (such as generative AI) and new scholarship in the field. It also contains a new chapter on the transformed opportunity for a reformed and buccaneering public service broadcasting in the face of automated misinformation and social division: locally, nationally and internationally.

     

    This trailblazing text is essential reading for all students and scholars interested in British media and contemporary media and society.

    PART I

    Press history                                                                                          

    JAMES CURRAN

    1. Press history as political mythology

    2. The struggle for a free press                                                            

    3. Janus face of reform                                                                          

    4. Industrialization of the press                                                             

    5. Era of the press barons                                                                      

    6. Press under public regulation                                                            

    7. Post-war press: Fable of progress                                                    

    8. Press and the remaking of Britain                                                     

    9. Moral decline of the press                                                                 

    PART II

    Broadcasting history                                                                            

    JEAN SEATON

    10. Reith and the denial of politics                                                        

    11. Broadcasting and the Blitz                                                                

    12. Public service commerce: ITV, new audiences and new revenue    

    13. Foreign affairs: The BBC, the world and the government                 

    14. Class, taste and profit                                                                        

    15. Managers, regulators and broadcasters                                             

    16. Public service under attack                                                                

    17.  Broadcasting roller-coaster                                                                

    PART III

    Rise of new media                                                                                 

    18. New media in Britain                                                                        

     JAMES CURRAN

    19. History of the internet                                                                        

     JAMES CURRAN

    20. Sociology of the internet                                                                   

      JAMES CURRAN

    21. Social media: Making new societies or polarization merchants?      

      JEAN SEATON

    PART IV

    Theories of the media                                                                           

    JEAN SEATON

    22. Metabolising Britishness                                                                   

    23. Public service understanding: Moonshot time for the BBC and public service broadcasting                                                                                     

    24. Broadcasting and the theory of public service                                  

    PART V

    Politics of the media                                                                             

    25. Industrial folklore and press reform                                                  

     JAMES CURRAN

    26. Contradictions in media policy                                                          

     JAMES CURRAN AND JEAN SEATON

    27. Media reform: Democratic choices                                                    

     JAMES CURRAN

    Biography

     James Curran is Professor of Communications at Goldsmiths, University of London. 

     

    Jean Seaton is Professor of Media History at the University of Westminster, Director of the Orwell Foundation and Co-Director of the Chevening South Asian Journalists programme.

    Praise for previous editions

     

    '. . . the best guide to the British media.'

    Nick Cohen, New Statesman

    'A classic of media history and analysis.'                                   

    Michael Foley, Irish Times

    'Many students and young people in and around the British media will make Power Without Responsibility into a new orthodoxy.'

    Jeremy Tunstall, Encounter 

    'Excellent new study of the press and broadcasting.'

    Tribune 

    'A classic text.'

    Stage and Television Today

    'An invaluable general textbook for the specialist student of communications as well as a guide into a complex area for social scientists.'

    Teaching Politics

    'Curran and Seaton’s writing, scholarly but not academicist, manages that rare and difficult task of rendering complex information and different theoretical approaches in a style open to teachers and post-16 students alike. No reading list for courses in media or the social sciences should be without Power Without Responsibility. It not only fuels the mind, it liberates it.'

    David Lusted, Journal of Educational Television

    'Every media studies student should be expected to read it [Power Without Responsibility].’

    Peter Golding, Times Higher Education Supplement 

    ‘Magisterial ... it provides a model’

    Graeme Turner, British Cultural Studies

    ‘Invaluable . . . Even the most casual reader with no professional interest in the subject would find it interesting. For the teacher of the media it is essential.’

    Media Educational Journal 

    ‘A sacred text of media studies.’

    Fred Inglis, Times Higher Educational Supplement

    ‘A readable and reliable guide to the history of the press and broadcasting, and the politics of the media in Britain. It is a book that anybody interested or involved in the debates about the future of democratic communications in these islands should study.’

    Robert Hutchison, Times Educational Supplement 

    ‘James Curran and Jean Seaton have cracked the canon.’

    Harriet Swain, Times Higher Educational Supplement

    ‘Seminal media studies text.’

    Huw Richards, Times Higher Educational Supplement

    ‘Students of politics, sociology, history and communications will find this Fontana original as thought-provoking and stimulating as anything that has appeared in print.’

    Eric Hiscock, The Bookseller

     

    Praise for this book

     

    ‘This is the book that changed everything in media studies.’

    Sally Young, University of Melbourne

    ‘This is a brilliant seminal history of broadcasting, press and the new media, vividly and insightfully told, with sharp vignettes of political interference and policy challenges. It is a powerful reminder of why public service broadcasting and truthful communication is vital to our democracy.’

    Baroness Helena Kennedy, President of Mansfield College, Oxford

    ‘This skillfully revised and updated edition of Curran and Seaton’s magnificent history is just as fresh and relevant now as it has been over the decades.’

    David Hesmondhalgh, Leeds University

    ‘The pleasure of a classic that just keeps redelivering. Power Without Responsibility proves itself yet again as the go-to source for analysis of the British media at their best and worst.’

    Barbie Zelizer, Annenberg School of Communication, University of Pennsylvania

    ‘If I was able to suggest one book about the history of journalism – whether to a student, a journalist or someone who simply wanted to know more about the role of the news media in our democracy – it would be Power Without Responsibility. Much of our understanding of the past is altered by the present, so we are all indebted to James Curran and Jean Seaton for this excellent new edition. There has been no shortage of controversies and debates about the news media in recent years: this book guides us through them with a sharp eye, a clear head, and the wisdom that comes from a formidable sense of history. Packed with eloquently delivered information, it is analytical but jargon-free, critical without ever being doctrinaire.’

    Justin Lewis, Cardiff University