Introduction |
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1 | (8) |
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Marxism and Mass Communication Research |
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9 | (38) |
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Debates within Political Economy and Ideology: Raymond Williams, Glasgow University Media Group and Stuart Hall |
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Marxism, Political Economy and Ideology |
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9 | (2) |
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Raymond Williams: Communications and the Long Revolution |
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11 | (4) |
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Cultural Materialism and Hegemony |
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15 | (3) |
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Raymond Williams and Material Culture: Television and the Press |
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18 | (2) |
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Raymond Williams and Communication Theory |
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20 | (6) |
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The Glasgow University Media Group and Television Bias |
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26 | (1) |
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Two Case Studies: Bad News and Good News |
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26 | (2) |
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The Eye of the Beholder and Objectivity in Media Studies |
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28 | (4) |
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Ideology and the Glasgow University Media Group |
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32 | (2) |
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Stuart Hall, Mass Communications and Hegemony |
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34 | (1) |
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Policing the Crisis: the Press, Moral Panics and the Rise of the New Right |
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35 | (1) |
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Ideology: the Return of the Repressed? |
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36 | (5) |
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Encoding and Decoding Media Discourse |
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41 | (1) |
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The Over-inflation of Discourse and Other Related Critiques |
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42 | (4) |
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46 | (1) |
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Habermas, Mass Culture and the Public Sphere |
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47 | (28) |
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47 | (1) |
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The Bourgeois Public Sphere |
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48 | (3) |
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Habermas, Mass Culture and the Early Frankfurt School |
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51 | (5) |
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Problems with Mass Culture: Habermas and the Frankfurt School |
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56 | (6) |
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The Public Sphere and Public Broadcasting |
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62 | (6) |
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Habermas, the Public Sphere and Citizenship |
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68 | (6) |
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74 | (1) |
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Critical Perspectives within Audience Research |
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75 | (43) |
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Problems in Interpretation, Agency, Structure and Ideology |
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The Emergence of Critical Audience Studies |
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75 | (3) |
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David Morley and the Television Audience: Encoding/Decoding Revisited |
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78 | (1) |
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Semiotics, Sociology and the Television Audience |
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79 | (4) |
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Class, Power and Ideology in Domestic Leisure |
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83 | (6) |
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John Fiske and the Pleasure of Popular Culture |
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89 | (3) |
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Life's More Fun with the Popular Press |
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92 | (2) |
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Pointless Populism or Resistant Pleasures? |
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94 | (8) |
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Feminism and Soap Opera: Reading into Pleasure |
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102 | (1) |
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Feminism, Mass Culture and Watching Dallas |
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103 | (2) |
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Psychoanalysis, Identity and Utopia |
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105 | (3) |
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Reading Magazine Cultures |
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108 | (5) |
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Feminism and Critical Theory |
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113 | (3) |
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116 | (2) |
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Marshall McLuhan and the Cultural Medium |
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118 | (30) |
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Space, Time and Implosion in the Global Village |
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118 | (1) |
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Innis, McLuhan and Canadian Social Theory |
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119 | (2) |
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The Medium is the Message |
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121 | (7) |
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Space and Time: Technology and Cultural Studies |
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128 | (4) |
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Oral, Print and Modern Cultures: Jack Goody and Anthony Giddens |
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132 | (6) |
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More Critical Observations |
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138 | (8) |
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146 | (2) |
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148 | (36) |
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Postmodernity, Mass Communications and Symbolic Exchange |
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Postmodernism as a Heterogeneous Field |
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148 | (1) |
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Baudrillard, Althusser and Debord |
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149 | (4) |
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Postmodernism, Symbolic Exchange and Marxism |
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153 | (9) |
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The French McLuhan: Simulations, Hyperreality and the Masses |
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162 | (5) |
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167 | (6) |
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Baudrillard's Irrationalism |
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173 | (9) |
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182 | (2) |
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New Media and the Information Society |
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184 | (32) |
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Schiller, Castells, Virilio and Cyberfeminism |
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Herb Schiller and Media Imperialism |
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186 | (6) |
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Informationalism, Networks and Social Movements: Manuel Castells |
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192 | (4) |
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The Limitations of Informational Politics |
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196 | (4) |
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Virilio, Speed and Communication |
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200 | (6) |
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Virilio and the Media of Mass Communications |
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206 | (4) |
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Critical Questions within Cyberfeminism |
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210 | (4) |
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214 | (2) |
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216 | (10) |
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The Three Paradigms of Mass Communication Research |
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216 | (10) |
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223 | (3) |
Glossary |
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226 | (6) |
Notes |
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232 | (3) |
References |
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235 | (15) |
Index |
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250 | |