For the past couple of years those of us in the Centre for Media history have been building up our relationship with Lund University where Media History is taught and actively researched. The connection owes a lot to my colleague, Kristin Skoog, who is Swedish but specialises in BBC radio history.
Although I have visited Lund a number of times I have only now spent a week here and in my role as a Visiting Fellow I was asked to contribute to the teaching and research programme.
So I found myself talking to a group of possibly bemused second year undergraduates about BBC radio broadcasts during the second world war. Maybe this was a bit reckless because, as you may know, Sweden was officially neutral during the war and I did wonder how they would respond to the rather gung-ho nature of BBC war reporting. In fact they were very interested and perceptive in their comments.
My next task was to interview two media history PhD students with their supervisors present. Despite not really knowing much about their subjects the conversation seemed to be productive and I certainly learned a lot (about the history of A4 (!) and ‘balloonings’ in Stockholm).
My main challenge was to address the impressive media history research seminar and this time I was prepared with my latest, not entirely legally obtained, audio from the BBC sound archive on the Suez crisis of 1956. Surprisingly I saw in the audience Bente Larsen, a leading figure in Danish radio archives who had popped over ‘the bridge’ (yes, that bridge) to listen. I followed the very impressive and calm young Danish academic, Heidi Svømmekjær, and all went well.
I should add that I do not speak a word of Swedish and so could not use the library. But everyone in Sweden seems to speak very good English.
It has been an extremely stimulating and valuable experience and I would be happy to talk to anyone out there who is interested in building Swedish links.
One final comment; as a guest I was given my own profile page on the Lund University website http://www.kom.lu.se/en/research/mediehistoria/guest-researcher/ What a shame we at Bournemouth are not able to design web profiles of this standard!
Hugh Chignell, Professor of Media History, The Media School. 15.3.2013