• Mass-Observation (Charles Madge & Tom Harrisson),
Mass-Observation (pamphlet), London, Frederick Muller, 1937. • Charles Madge & Humphrey Jennings, eds.
May the Twelfth, Mass-Observation Day-Surveys 1937, by over two hundred observers, London,
Faber and Faber, 1937. • Charles Madge & Tom Harrisson, ''First Year's Work'', London, Lindsay Drummond, 1938. • Charles Madge & Tom Harrisson,
Britain, Harmondsworth, Penguin Books, 1939. • Mass-Observation,
War Begins at Home, London, Chatto & Windus, 1940. • Mass-Observation,
Clothes Rationing, Advertising Service Guild, 1941 • Mass-Observation,
Home Propaganda, Advertising Service Guild, 1941 • Mass-Observation,
The Pub and the People, London, Gollancz, 1943; reprinted Seven Dials Press, 1971. • Mass-Observation,
War Factory, London, Gollancz, 1943. • Mass-Observation, ''People's Homes'', London, John Murray/Advertising Service Guild, 1943 • Mass-Observation,
The Journey Home, London, John Murray/Advertising Service Guild, 1944 • Mass-Observation,
Britain and her Birth Rate, London, John Murray/Advertising Service Guild, 1945 • Mass-Observation,
Peace and the Public - A Study, London, Longmans, Green, 1947 • Mass-Observation (Herbert Wilcox),
Juvenile Delinquency, London, Falcon press, 1949. • Mass-Observation (with illustrations by
Ronald Searle),
Meet Yourself at the Doctors, London, Naldrett Press, 1949 • Mass-Observation (with illustrations by
Ronald Searle),
Meet Yourself on Sunday, London, Naldrett Press, 1949 • Tom Harrisson,
Britain Revisited, London, Gollancz, 1961. • Tom Harrisson,
Living through the Blitz, London, Collins, 1976. A number of publications are also available from the University of Sussex. The following selection of titles also gives some idea of the scope of Mass Observation's work: •
Attitudes to AIDS •
Bolton Working Class Life • ''Children's
Millennium Diaries'' •
Everyday use of social relaxants and stimulants •
Gender and Nationhood •
Britain in the Falklands War •
Health, sickness and the work ethic, Helen Busby (2000) •
Looking at Europe: pointers to some British attitudes • ''Researching women's lives: notes from visits to East Central Europe'' • ''Mass-Observation: des 'capsules' de vie quotidienne'' •
One Day in the Life of Television, ed. Sean Day-Lewis (1989) •
Sex surveyed, 1949–1994 – The actual Mass-Observation survey was called Little Kinsey; the results were published in a book by Liz Stanley under the above title. •
Pub and the People: A Worktown study ed. Tom Harrisson (1943) •
Weeping in the Cinema in 1950, Sue Harper and Vincent Porter (1995) Since the archive was moved and re-established at Sussex University, a number of books based on the diaries commissioned by Mass-Observation in 1939 have been published. These include: •
Among You Taking Notes. The Wartime Diary of Naomi Mitchison ed. Dorothy Sheridan. 1985 (Victor Gollancz). 2000 (Phoenix) •
Our Hidden Lives, The Everyday Diaries of Forgotten Britain between 1945–48 ed. Simon Garfield 2005 (Ebury Press) • ''Love and War in London. A Woman's Diary 1939–42'' by Olivia Cockett, ed. Robert Malcolmson. 2005 (Wilfrid Laurier University Press). 2008 (The History Press) •
We Are At War. The Diaries of Five Ordinary People in Extraordinary Times ed. Simon Garfield 2006 (Ebury press) • ''Nella Last's War'' ed. Richard Broad and Suzie Fleming, 1981 (Falling Wall Press). 2006 (Profile Books) •
Private Battles: How the War Almost Defeated Us ed. Simon Garfield 2007 (Ebury press) •
Nella Last’s Peace, covering the years 1945–8. ed. Patricia and Robert Malcolmson, 2008 (Profile Books) • ''Our Longest Days - a People's History of the Second World War'', an anthology ed. Sandra Koa Wing 2008 (Profile Books) •
Wartime Women. A Mass Observation Anthology ed. Dorothy Sheridan 1990 (Heinemann). 2009 (Phoenix Press) •
Dorset in Wartime: The Diary of Phyllis Walther 1941-1942 ed. Patricia Malcolmson and Robert Malcolmson 2009 (Dorset Record Society) See also: • Hubble, Nick.
Mass-Observation and Everyday Life. Houndmills-Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. 2006. . A history of the Mass-Observation movement from a former Research Fellow at the Mass-Observation Archive, University of Sussex, UK (from back cover). Findings of Mass-Observation have also played a large part in such works of social history as
Joe Moran's
Queuing for Beginners. ==See also==