It's the purpose of this session to emphasise that the mere act of 
            recording is not the task of the drudge, the clerk. It can advance 
            our insight into the fabric, the conduct of the world. What emerges 
            can be used by the painter, photographer, film-maker, photographer, 
            poet. The film you'll see is about MASS OBSERVATION. I want to stress 
            the capacity for such an activity to uncover the Magickal. 
          
            Founded in 1937 by the anthropologist Tom Harrison and the poet, Charles 
            Madge, Mass Observation was dedicated to recording the British national 
            life in minute detail. Other participants were the painters William 
            Coldstream, Graham Bell, the collagist Julian Trevelyan, the photographer 
            Humphrey Spender, and the film maker Humphrey Jennings. 
             
          
            Mary-Lou Jennings, Humphrey Jennings, Film-Maker Painter Poet 
            , BFI London 1982. 
          
            David Mellor writes, "One guise which reconciled the twin demands 
            of the Surrealist and the Documentarist was that of the Poet Reporter. 
            In his BBC broadcasts of 1938, on the general theme of Poetry and 
            the Public, Jennings posited a unity which once existed in English 
            literature before the advent of the mass media in which the poet was 
            a kind of reporter; and poet-reporter was in fact the title adopted 
            by Charles Madge during these years, echoing the Utopian hopes of 
            Mass Observation to have reconciled science and art after their separation 
            brought about by the Industrial Revolution. " 
          Jennings' 
            film Spare Time (1939) was partly set in Bolton, much studied by Mass 
            Observation. 
          
            For a general survey of the Thirties, see Clark et al, Culture and 
            Crisis in Britain in the 1930's , Lawrence and Wishart, 1979 
          
            see also Sylvia Harvey, "Who wants to know what and Why", 
            Ten 8 , No.23 
             
            The Book arranged by Charles Madge and Tom Harrison, Penguin Books, 
            Harmondsworth 1939 180 x 110 cms. 
             
            Humphrey Spender speaks in the film. In his book Lensman, 
            he writes, " [Tom Harrison] believed as I did that press photography 
            was largely falsifying and irrelevant. MO was committed to `study 
            real life' and for this purpose the concealed prying camera was essential...At 
            our disgusting breakfasts in the smelly parlour of our headquarters 
            house, Tom Harrison would talk me into taking my camera to christenings, 
            Holy Communions, pubs, railway stations, public lavatories. Away from 
            headquarters I was very much on my own, sometimes, frightened, embarrassed, 
            bored and depressed. To the working people of this town my manner 
            of speaking was la de fucking da . To me their language and accent 
            was foreign." 
            "Democracy is not simply an inherited freedom to do what you 
            like or what others like to supply. It inevitably involves, among 
            other things, the intelligent operation of society for the optimum 
            benefit of all the people; and for this end the people need to be 
            given every facility and encouragement, both to ber informed in fact 
            and to be capable of intelligent decision in theory." Tom Harrison, 
            Contact ,"The Public's Progress", June 1947, p.xiii. 
             
          BOOKLIST 
            
          
            Publications 
            The First Year's Work ,Mass Observation 1937 
          
            Mass Observation Day Survey May 12th 1937, Faber 
            and Faber London 1987 (1937)
           
            Britain by Mass Observation ,Penguin, Harmondsworth 
            1939 
          Contact 
            , 1947,Saturday 
            Night by Mass Observation, pp.4-12, illustrations by Gerard 
            Hoffnung 
          
            Contact March 1947, Faith and Fear in Postwar Britain, by 
            Mass Observation, pp.4-16
           
            Contact March 1948, Don't know Don't Care, by Mass Observation, 
            pp.56-62. 
          
            Contact July 1949, Keeping up with the Jones's, by Mass Observation, 
            pp.41-45 
          
            Mass Observation, The Press and its Readers ,Art 
            and Technics London 1949 
          
            Humphrey Spender, Lensman Photographs 1932-52 Chatto 
            and Windus London 1987 
          
            Humphrey Spender, Worktown Peopl, Falling Wall Press, 
            1982. 
          exhibition 
            catalogue, The Thirties, Hayward Gallery London 1980 
            
           
          
            The Archives of Mass Observation are in the collection of the University 
            of Sussex.