Professor Michael Pickering

PhD (Leeds).

  • Emeritus Professor of Media and Cultural Analysis

Michael  joined the Department of Social Sciences in 1992, having previously taught at Massey University in Aotearoa/New Zealand, and at the University of Sunderland, and having been Research Officer at the Leicester University Centre for Mass Communication Research. At 天堂视频, along with Graham Murdock, he was a founding member of the Communications and Media Studies section of the Department. Michael graduated from the University of Essex and received a Masters degree and subsequently a doctorate from the University of Leeds, having undertaken historical research in popular culture.

Over the past ten years he has acted as External Examiner at ten different universities in Britain and Ireland, and acted as External Examiner for doctoral theses at various universities, both in Britain and abroad. In 2006 he worked with Dan Hallin and others for the International Communications Association as a panel judge for Best Essay in Political Communications. Michael served two five-year terms as a member of the AHRC’s Peer Review College, finishing in December 2012. He is a member of the editorial board of Memory Studies and the Folk Music Journal, and Reviews Editor for the European Journal of Communication.

Michael has published over a hundred articles and chapters in edited collections. These cover a number of areas including popular music, racism and popular culture, imperialism and theatrical history, Mass Observation, working-class writing, news and documentary, stereotyping and representation, humour and comedy, creativity and cultural production, media and memory, and historical hermeneutics.

As either author or editor, he has published eighteen books, and with Emily Keightley is currently working on a study of the role of photography and recorded music in everyday practices of remembering.  A book on this topic will appear in 2015.

Overall Michael’s work covers the fields of media and communication studies, social and cultural history, critical humour studies, the sociology of art and culture, music studies and memory studies. He has also written extensively on research methods, having edited collections on methods in cultural studies and memory studies, and been co-author of Researching Communications (Bloomsbury, 2007), along with David Deacon, Peter Golding and Graham Murdock. He has recently completed a major AHRC-funded research project on music in the workplace, with Marek Korczynski of Nottingham University and Emma Robertson of La Trobe University. Their book, Rhythms of Labour: Music at Work in Britain, is published by Cambridge University Press. It is accompanied by a double-CD of recordings associated with music at work, released by Harbourtown Records.  With Emily Keightley, Michael has also recently completed a research project funded by the Leverhulme Trust on media and memory. Their book The Mnemonic Imagination, published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2012, provides the theoretical framework for their analysis of the data deriving from this research.

  • Sapountzis, A. & Condor, S. (2013 forthcoming). Conspiracy accounting and intergroup theorising. Political Psychology.
  • Condor, S. (2012) Understanding English public reactions to the Scottish Parliament. National Identities, 14, 83-98.
  • Condor, S. & Figgou, L. (2012) Rethinking the prejudice problematic: A collaborative cognition perspective. In, J. Dixon & M. Levine (Eds) Beyond Prejudice. Cambridge University Press.
  • Condor, S. (2011) Rebranding Britain? Ideological dilemmas in political appeals to “British Multiculturalism”. Martyn Barrett, Chris Flood and John Eade (Eds) Nationalism, Ethnicity, Citizenship: Multidisciplinary Perspectives. Cambridge Scholars.
  • Condor, S. (2011) Towards a social psychology of citizenship? Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 21, 193-201.
  • Condor, S. (2011) Sense and sensibility: The conversational etiquette of English national self-identification. In, A. Aughey & C. Berbech (Eds) These Englands: A conversation on national identity. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
  • Condor S. (2010) Devolution and National Identity: The Rules of English Dis/engagement. Nations & Nationalism. 16, 525-543.
  • Gibson, S. & Condor, S. (2009) State institutions and social identity. British Journal of Social Psychology, 48, 313-336.