Electronic media history is steadily assuming a central role in the study of mass communications, radio, television popular culture, journalism, and the new electronic media platforms. This collection of research essays from the major publications in the electronic media discipline illustrates the growth and development of electronic media research from its earliest appearance to current day. Representing a wide variety of topics and scholarship, the articles included here demonstrate landmark research in the field, and illustrate varied methodological approaches to historiography. Media archival collections have grown and represent an increasing acknowledgement of and opportunity within the broad ranges of electronic media history. The objects of media history are as broad as the term itself. Today's historians build on existing research just as today's electronic media engineers and scientists reference the historical patents and technology of the past. Appropriate and apt as a textbook for graduate and undergraduate courses in a wide variety of subjects and disciplines -- Broadcasting; Electronic Media History; Journalism; Mass Communication; Media Studies; Telecommunications; Media History, and others - this distinctive collection demonstrates how electronic media research has evolved and lays the groundwork for future study.
However, providing context and analysis to visual evidence is a critical role for the broadcast historian. ... From the analysis of the person behind the camera, the historian can begin to analyze the content of the image.
Retrieved from: https://buildfire.com/app-statistics/ Blumberg, S. J., & Luke, J. V. (2018). Wireless substitution: Early release of estimates from the National Health Interview Survey, January–June, 2018.
The Canberra Times' television reviewer John Howard panned Deveson's interviewing style on Impact and trivialized daytime programming for women by describing her technique of asking oneword questions “which the subject is supposed to ...
This book puts forward the concept of "communications from below" in contrast to the "globalization from above" that characterizes many new developments in international organization and media practices.
This volume provides a thorough review of broadcasting history in the US, from radio through to cable and internet. For media students and anyone interested in the development of American...
The Television Code of the National Association of Broadcasters: The First Ten Years. ... Standards of Practice for American Broadcasters. ... America's First Network TV Censor: The Work of NBC's Stockton Helffrich.
In Routledge Reader on Electronic Media History, ed. Donald G. Godfrey and Susan L. Brinson. New York: Routledge. Payan, Tony. 2020. “Actors, Strategic Fields, and Game Rules: Examining Governance at the U.S.-Mexico Border in the ...
I am the camera that Christopher Isherwood and later Baudrillard16 understand as already inside my head , but having interpellated the technology's logic into my sense of self , with a webcam I can also interact with myself - the ...
The editors illustrate how book history studies have evolved into a broad approach which incorporates social and cultural considerations governing the production, dissemination and reception of print and texts.
... 26 Doerfer, John C. (FCC Commissioner & Chair), 393, 395 Dole, Sen. Robert (presidential candidate, 1996), 453, 660 Domestic effect, 99–100, 337–338 Don Lee Network, 173–174, 419 Don Quixote, 620 Donahue, Phil (host), 528 Donaldson, ...