A moment of danger : critical studies in the history of U.S. communication since World War II /

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Peck, Janice (Editor), Stole, Inger L. (Editor)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Milwaukee, Wisconsin : Marquette University Press, [2011]
Series:Diederich studies in media and communication ; no. 2.
Subjects:
Online Access:An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view
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Table of Contents:
  • Introduction: moments of danger and challenges to the selective tradition in U.S. communication history / Janice Peck
  • Politics as patriotism: advertising and consumer activism during World War II / Inger L. Stole
  • The revolt against radio: postwar media criticism and the struggle for broadcast reform / Victor Pickard
  • "Our union is not for sale": the postwar struggle for workplace control in the American newspaper industry / James F. Tracy
  • "Things will never be the same around here": How See it now shaped television news reporting / Dinah Zeiger
  • "We can remember it for you wholesale": lessons from the broadcast blacklist / Carol A. Stabile
  • Foreign correspondents, passports and McCarthyism / Edward Alwood
  • "Love that AFL-CIO": organized labor's use of television, 1950-1970 / Nathan Godfried
  • A moment of danger. The postwar "TV problem" and the creation of public television in the U.S. / Laurie Ouellette
  • Lockouts, protests, and scabs: a critical assessment of the Los Angeles Herald Examiner strike / Bonnie Brennen
  • The reporters' rebellion: The Chicago journalism review, 1968-1975 / Stephen Macek
  • Oprah Winfrey, new liberalism and the politics of race in late twentieth century America / Janice Peck
  • Public radio, This American life and the neoliberal turn / Jason Loviglio
  • "Sticking it to the man". Neoliberalism: corporate media and strategies of resistance in the 21st century / Deepa Kumar
  • Contesting democratic communications: the case of current TV / James F. Hamilton
  • Critical media literacy: critiquing corporate media with radical production / Bettina Fabos.