
Key Readings in Media Today
Mass Communication in Contexts
Price: $45.00
Add to Cart- ISBN: 978-0-415-99205-3
- Binding: Paperback (also available in Hardback)
- Published by: Routledge
- Publication Date: 15th September 2008 (Available for Pre-order)
- Pages: 432
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About the Book
@text:By combining classic studies of mass communication with contemporary research on media, technology, and culture, Key Readings in Media Today will help students to make sense of the rapidly changing media environment. This collection is designed to supplement the 3rd edition of Media Today: An Introduction to Mass Communication, but it can also be used independently.Key Readings in Media Today provides both historical and contemporary analyses of each of the major media industries: book, newspaper, magazine, sound recording/radio, motion picture, television, new media, advertising, and public relations. The volume places an emphasis on convergence, looking at the ways boundaries between these media industries are blurring in surprising new ways. Section introductions and headnotes for each article offer valuable critical and historical context, while review questions after each reading test students' understanding of key concepts. Additional resources on a companion website are designed to spark classroom discussion and connect the readings to the latest contemporary media issues and controversies.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part I: Understanding the Nature of Mass Media
1: Mass Communication, Popular Taste and Organized Social Action, P.F. Lazarsfeld and Robert King Merton
2: Media Literacy Approach, W. James Potter
3: Common Media for an Uncommon Nation, Ben H. Bagdikian
4: Political Problem, Political Solutions, Robert McChesney
5: Not Toasters: The Special Nature of Media Products, C. Edwin Baker
6: Four puzzles from Cyberspace, Lawrence Lessig
Part II: The Print Media
7: Making news: Time and Typifications, Gaye Tuchman
8: Convergence: News Production in a Digital Age, Eric Klinenberg
9: Pushing Time Ahead: Digital Challenges Facing Print Media, Brooke Erin Duffy
10: Sex, Lies, and Advertising, Gloria Steinem
11: Is There a Text in This Advertising Campaign?: Literature, Marketing, and Harry Potter, Philip Nel
12: Newspapers Rocken Espanol, Mark Fitzgerald
Part III: The Electronic Media
13: What Is News?, Neal Postman and Steve Powers
14: Queens for a Day: Queer Eye for the Straight Guy and the Neoliberal Project, Katherine Sender
15: Deconstructing the Diversity Principle, Philip M. Napoli
16: Radio in Modernity: Time, Place and ‘Communicative Capacity,’ David Hendy
17: Fallout: A Follow Up to the Internet Debacle, Janis Ian
18: Promoting and Protecting the Industry, Janet Wasko
19: Art House Meets Graphic Novel, or Blockbuster Meets Superhero Comic?: The Contradictory Relationship between Film and Comic Art, Matthew P. McAllister, Ian Gordon and Mark Jancovich.
Part IV: The Digital Media
20: The Long Tail, Chris Anderson
21: Peer Production and Sharing, Yochai Benkler
22: Your Brain on Video Games: Could They Actually Be Good for You?, Steven Johnson
23: Sports Online: The Newest Player in Mediasport, Michael Real
24: Quentin Tarantino’s Star Wars?: Digital Cinema, Media Convergence and Participatory Culture, Henry Jenkins
25: Download This: YouTube Phenom Has a Big Secret, Ethan Smith and Peter Lattman
Part IV: Advertising and Public Relations
26: The Work of Adcult, James B. Twitchell
27: ‘Chaos Scenario': A Look at the Marketing Industry's Coming Disaster, Bob Garfield
28: Rethinking Television in the Digital Age, Joseph Turow
29: Philanthropy as Public Relations: A Critical Perspective on Cause Marketing, Inger L. Stole
30: Media, War, and Propaganda: Strategies of Information Management during the 2003 Iraq War, Deepa Kumar
31: The Public and its Problems: Some Notes for the New Millennium, Stuart Ewen
About the Author(s)
Brooke Erin Duffy is pursuing her PhD at the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg School for Communication.
Joseph Turow is Robert Lewis Shayon Professor of Communication at the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School for Communication. He is the author of more than 50 articles and 8 books on mass media industries, including the third edition of his textbook Media Today: An Introduction to Mass Communication (Routledge, forthcoming September 2008). He currently serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, Journalism, Critical Studies in Media Communication, Poetics, the Sage Annual Review of Communication Research, and New Media and Society. He was Chair of the Mass Communication Division of the International Communication Association from 1993 to 1997.
