Imagining Post-war Journalism: Reflections of Scandinavian Foreign Affairs Journalists, 1945-1948

Name of applicant

Emil Eiby Seidenfaden

Institution

University of Oxford

Amount

DKK 1,269,643

Year

2021

Type of grant

Reintegration Fellowships

What?

With the project, I examine how Scandinavian foreign affairs journalists reimagined their profession in the earliest post-war period 1945-1948. I capitalise on insights from my earlier work on the work and network of Danish journalists in war-exile in Britain (many such exile journalists became leading foreign affairs journalists in postwar Denmark), but I move into new ground by applying an intellectual history angle, and a cross-Scandinavian comparative approach in the post-war period. I turn the lens towards the practices (career trajectories, networking) and meta-reflections of foreign affairs-journalists themselves, as opposed to earlier scholarship which has predominantly focused on their interventions as opinion-makers or gatekeepers of public opinion.

Why?

The project pushes the boundaries of the history of journalism in Scandinavia by providing, for the first time, a comparative study of Scandinavian journalism's construction of its own significance in the post-war world. It seeks at one and the same time to bridge intellectual history and history of journalism, to combine a broad and a narrow methodology by delivering a comparative study of a small group of leading actors in three countries and to bring together empirical findings from journalism in three countries thus internationalising the often nationally confined press historiographies in Scandinavia.

How?

The project analyses the ways in which journalists, in their writings and their practices, legitimised a vision for post-war journalism. Important sources include newspaper content, memoirs, pamphlets etc, published by leading foreign affairs journalists around a small selection of 'hotspots' between 1945 and 1948. I will concentrate on the earliest Cold War when the conflict was not entrenched so as to limit the retrospective glance of the actors. Collections of media content are accessible in Denmark through the Royal Library Mediestream project, in Sweden through the Svenska dagstidningar database, and in Norway at Natjonalbiblioteket. I will also work together with renowned colleagues, including in intellectual and transnational history at UCPH and media history at Lund University.

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