Dr James Nott
Lecturer
- Phone
- +44 (0)1334 46 2918
- jjn4@st-andrews.ac.uk
- Location
- St Katharine's Lodge
- Office hours
- Tuesday 10 - 11am via Teams
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Biography
Educated at state schools in Cheshire, ÌýI gained all of my degrees from the History Faculty at the University of ÌýOxford, Ìýfrom undergraduate to PhD. I worked at the Universities of Sussex and Edinburgh before moving to 58³Ô¹Ï.
Teaching
I have teaching expertise from undergraduate to postgraduate level, in a wide range of courses, covering topics from Anglo-Scottish relations in the 17th Century to 20th Century British social, economic, cultural and political history. I Ìýoffer the following Modern History Honours courses:Ìý
- Britain in the 1920s and 1930s: Aspects of Everyday LifeÌý
I participate in the teaching of the following Postgraduate option:
Research areas
I am a social and cultural historian specialising in twentieth-century British history. I pioneered the social and cultural history of social dancing in Britain and my most recent monograph was the first history of dance halls in Britain.ÌýGoing to the Palais: A Social and Cultural History of Dancing and Dance Halls in Britain, 1918-60Ìý(OUP, 2015) won widespread critical acclaim from reviewers and is due to be re-issued in paperback in 2020. I also wroteÌýMusicÌýfor the People: Popular Music and Dance in Interwar BritainÌý(OUP, 2002) (awardedÌýproxime accessitÌýto the Whitfield Prize by the Royal Historical Society) the first academic history of the British popular music industry in the 1920s and 1930s. I also co-editedÌýClasses, Cultures and Politics: Essays on BritishÌýHistory for Ross McKibbinÌý(2011), also published by OUP.
I am currently working on a second history of popular music in interwar Britain and on anti-Soviet propaganda in twentieth century British popular culture. My next book publication will be a global history of the interwar dance craze which I am working on with Klaus Nathaus of the University of Oslo.
Reviews:
Going to the PalaisÌý
A 'monumental book...The depth of research, sources, and critical reflection... marks it out as a classic.'ÌýKeith Gildart,ÌýJournal of Modern HistoryÌý
'a landmark study ...ÌýGoing to the PalaisÌýstands as an exemplary work of social and cultural history'Ìý-ÌýPeter Bailey,ÌýAmerican Historical Review
'In its range of topics, density of assembled evidence and consistent, subtlety of argument, this book is set to become the definitive account of dance halls in 20th century Britain.' -ÌýJeffrey Richards, History Today
Music for theÌýPeople
"Historians have generally not given music the attention that they have been prepared to allow to literature and fine art. Reading books of this quality might finally make them realise just how much they have been missing." -ÌýSocial History Society Bulletin
"This is a fine, scholarly monograph and the author demonstrates a clarity of expression throughout. Such a comprehensive account of inter-war commercial music deserves a long shelf life among studies of twentieth-century popular culture." -ÌýMatthew Hilton,ÌýEnglish Historical Review
PhD Supervision
My research specialisms are: Twentieth Century British Social and Cultural History; Popular Culture and Leisure (esp. music, dance halls); the history of twentieth century Mass Media (cinema, radio, gramophone); the British Film Industry; the BBC; Class and Culture; Interwar Britain; the 1920s and 1930s; the Second World War Home Front.
I welcome PhD students who wish to research in any of these areas.
PhD Supervisor for:Ìý
Martin Dibbs,ÌýShaping popular culture: radio broadcasting, mass entertainment and the work of the BBC Variety Department 1933-1967
Tomochika Sato,ÌýTheatre and Identity: the Social Roles of Provincial Theatres and Touring Drama Companies in the British Isles, c.1850-1914
Louise Heren,Ìý'An Ugly Epoch': Male Sexual Violence in Interwar Scotland, 1918-30Ìý(co-supervisor with Bill Knox)
OTHER EXPERTISE
I have considerable experience of media work, having been involved in several television and radio documentaries on the BBC and in Australia on ABC radio network. Details are below:
TelevisionÌý
- Last Man in the Hammersmith Palais, interviewed/appeared, BBC 4 broadcast December 2007Ìý
1 hour Documentary which recounts the story of west London venue the Hammersmith Palais, talking aboutÌý it’s birth as a dance hall in the 1920s/30s. - Dance Britannia, interviewed/appeared, BBC 4 broadcast December 2007Ìý
A three part history of social dancing in Britain for BBC4. Episode 1: Dance Hall Days, talking about moral panic and dancing, women and dancing and the new social dances of the 1920s and 1930s.Ìý - The Vera Lynn Story, interviewed/appeared, BBC2Ìý broadcast September 2010Ìý
A documentary of the life of Vera Lynn, led by Sir David Frost. - Len Goodman’s Dancing Feet: The British Ballroom Story, interviewed/appeared, BBC4/BBCHD broadcast December 2012. A 1 hour documentary looking at the development of ballroom dancing in Britain, talking about the social functions of dance halls and their popularity.
Radio
- 'The Definitive History of Jazz in Britain,' Jazz FM, UK, 4 April - 6 June 2021
- Books and Arts’ - ‘Going to the Palais,’ ABC Radio National, Australia, 18 June 2016
: - James Nott: Going to the Palais - Books and Arts - ABC ...
At the turn of the 20th Century, dancing was mostly an upper class pursuit in Britain. But by the 1930s, it had become a modern craze and millions of people were ... - ‘Thinking Allowed’ – ‘Going to the Palais,’ BBC Radio 4, 23 March 2016
: - Dance halls, Pick-up artists, Thinking Allowed - BBC Radio 4
Dance halls: a social and cultural history. James Nott, Lecturer in History at the University of St. Andrews, talks to Laurie Taylor about the origins, meaning and ... - Making History, feature item/interview, BBC Radio 4 broadcast February 2010Ìý
Radio appeal and discussion related to my research on Britain’s dance hall culture.Ìý - Deborah Bull’s Dance Nation, interviewed/appeared, BBC Radio 4 broadcast September 2012
Radio series looking at the history of dance in Britain. Several appearances
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Selected publications
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Nott, J. J., 7 Sept 2020, (In preparation) Worlds of Social Dancing: : Dance floor encounters and the global rise of couple dancing, c. 1910–c. 1940. Nott, J. & Nathaus, K. (eds.). Manchester University Press, (Studies in Popular Culture).
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter
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Nott, J. J. (Editor) & Nathaus, K. (Editor), 7 Sept 2020, (In preparation) Manchester University Press. (Studies in Popular Culture)
Research output: Book/Report › Anthology
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Nott, J. J., 28 Aug 2020, (Accepted/In press) Musicking in Twentieth Century Europe: A Handbook. Nathaus, K. & Rempe, M. (eds.). de Gruyter, (Contemporary European History).
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter
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Nott, J., 21 Sept 2018, In: Architectural History. 61, p. 205-233 29 p.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Open access
Nott, J. J., 2017, In: Journal of Social History. 51, 2, p. 387-406 20 p.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Nott, J., 3 Sept 2015, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 327 p.
Research output: Book/Report › Book
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Nott, J. J., Sept 2013, In: Cultural and Social History. 10, 3, p. 439-456. 18 p.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Nott, J. J., 7 Apr 2011, Classes, Cultures and Politics: Essays on British History for Ross McKibbin. Griffiths, C. V. J., Nott, J. J. & Whyte, W. (eds.). Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 227-246 20 p.
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Chapter
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Nott, J. J. (Editor), Griffiths, C. (Editor) & Whyte, W. (Editor), 7 Apr 2011, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 334 p.
Research output: Book/Report › Book
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Nott, J. J., 5 Sept 2002, Oxford: Oxford University Press. (Oxford Historical Monographs)
Research output: Book/Report › Book
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