General Editor's Acknowledgments
Media Studies: The Interdiscipline of the Present and the Future
Introduction: Mapping the Field of Media History
1 Left Behind: End Times for a Media History Paradigm
2 The Two Marxes: Bridging the Political Economy/Technology and Culture Divide
3 The Conditions of Media's Possibility: A Foucauldian Approach to Media History
4 Race/Ethnicity in Media History
5 Approaches to Gender and Sexuality in Media History
Ronald J. Zboray and Mary Saracino Zboray
8 The Enlightenment and the Bourgeois Public Sphere (Through the Eyes of a London Merchant-Writer)
9 Journalism History: North America
13 Communications Networks in the United States: From Chappe to Marconi
14 “Quickening Urgency”: The Telegraph and Wire Services in 1846–1893
16 Moving Images: Portable Histories of Film Exhibition
17 Sound Histories: Communication, Technology, Media, and Fidelity
20 Advertising and Consumer Culture: A Historical Review
21 The Rise of the Professional Communicator
22 The New World Information and Communication Order: An Idea That Refuses to Die
23 Text, Translation, and the End of the Unified Press
25 Communication and Democracy: The Roots of Media Studies
27 Propaganda Studies: The US Interwar Years
28 Frankfurt School, Media, and the Culture Industry
29 The Rise and Fall of the Limited Effects Model
30 The Political Economy of Communication: An Idiosyncratic Presentation of an Emerging Subfield
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