Description
Translating the complex, blood-soaked realities of the 1798 United Irishmen Rebellion into broadcast media requires high levels of narrative curation and editorial choice. Rebellion: A Television History of 1798 delivers a thorough, data-driven institutional audit tracing the development, scripting, and public reception of major television history projects dedicated to this foundational era.
The text looks deeply past simple television reviews to evaluate the practical functional operations of documentary production, archival film sourcing, and the strategic deployment of historical re-enactments. The authors guide researchers systematically through the institutional dynamics of national broadcasters, examining how modern political climates directly influenced the presentation of historic revolutionary figures. This premium volume stands as a mandatory asset for advanced media studies tracks, communication geographers, and research libraries tracking cultural history.
Core research frameworks evaluated within this study:
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Media Production Analytics: Breaks down specific archival licensing agreements, broadcast script frameworks, and historical consultant metrics.
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Socio-Political Resonance Mapping: Documents how television representations altered or reinforced public understandings of the 1798 conflict across decades.
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Highly Scannable reference Layout: Formatted with organized chronological chapters and clean production data blocks for low-effort lookup.






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