Full Contents

VOLUME I MEDIA HISTORY AND THE FOUNDATIONS OF MEDIA STUDIES

Contributors to Volume I

General Editor's Acknowledgments

Media Studies: The Interdiscipline of the Present and the Future, Angharad N. Valdivia

Introduction: Mapping the Field of Media History, John Nerone

PART 1 APPROACHES

1 Left Behind: End Times for a Media History Paradigm, Carolyn Marvin

2 The Two Marxes: Bridging the Political Economy/Technology and Culture Divide, Vincent Mosco

3 The Conditions of Media's Possibility: A Foucauldian Approach to Media History, Jeremy Packer

4 Race/Ethnicity in Media History, Catherine Squires

5 Approaches to Gender and Sexuality in Media History, Gretchen Soderlund

6 The History of the Book, Ronald J. Zboray and Mary Saracino Zboray

PART 2 MOMENTS

7 Writing, John Durham Peters

8 The Enlightenment and the Bourgeois Public Sphere (Through the Eyes of a London Merchant-Writer), Juraj Kittler

9 Journalism History: North America, Richard Kaplan

10 Journalism History: Europe, Jürgen Wilke

11 Journalism History: Korea, Sae-Eun Kim

12 Journalism History: China, Shihua Chen and Qian Wang

13 Communications Networks in the United States: From Chappe to Marconi, Richard R. John

14 “Quickening Urgency”: The Telegraph and Wire Services in 1846–1893, Terhi Rantanen

15 Photography, Craig Robertson

16 Moving Images: Portable Histories of Film Exhibition, Haidee Wasson

17 Sound Histories: Communication, Technology, Media, and Fidelity, Eric W. Rothenbuhler

18 Television, Laurie Ouellette

19 The Culture Industries, Frederick Wasser

20 Advertising and Consumer Culture: A Historical Review, Inger L. Stole

21 The Rise of the Professional Communicator, Kevin G. Barnhurst

22 The New World Information and Communication Order: An Idea That Refuses to Die, Kaarle Nordenstreng

23 Text, Translation, and the End of the Unified Press, David Alan Grier

24 Media and Mobility, Mark Andrejevic

PART 3 FOUNDATIONS

25 Communication and Democracy: The Roots of Media Studies, Hanno Hardt

26 The Chicago School of Sociology and Mass Communication Research: Rise, Rejection, Incorporation, and Rediscovery, Karin Wahl-Jorgensen

27 Propaganda Studies: The US Interwar Years, Sue Collins

28 Frankfurt School, Media, and the Culture Industry, Douglas Kellner

29 The Rise and Fall of the Limited Effects Model, Peter Simonson

30 The Political Economy of Communication: An Idiosyncratic Presentation of an Emerging Subfield, Robert W. McChesney

31 Unmasking Class and Tradition: Questioning Recuperative History and Affiliation in Cultural Studies, Cameron McCarthy and Jennifer Logue

Index

VOLUME II MEDIA PRODUCTION

Contributors to Volume II

General Editor's Acknowledgments

Media Studies: The Interdiscipline of the Present and the Future, Angharad N. Valdivia

Making Media Production Visible, Vicki Mayer

PART 1 PRODUCTION REGIMES AND INFRASTRUCTURES

1 The Governance of Communication and Culture: Regularizing the Regimes of Production and Consumption, Katharine Sarikakis

2 Media Production and Information Policy: Growth Through Replication, Patrick Burkart and Lucas Logan

3 The Slippery Slopes of “Soft Power”: Production Studies, International Relations, and the Military Industrial Media Complex, Jonathan Burston

4 Television-Set Production in the Era of Digital TV, Mari Castañeda

5 Citizenship and Media Ownership, John McMurria

PART 2 THE CULTURAL INDUSTRIES AND THE ORGANIZATION OF PRODUCTION

6 Music in the New Capitalism, Timothy D. Taylor

7 Whither the Professional Book Publisher in an Era of Distribution on Demand, Laura J. Miller

8 “This Is What I Need, This Is What Will Travel”: Television Programs in the Era of Transition, Shawn Shimpach

9 How Should We Think About Audience Power in the Digital Age?, Joseph Turow

PART 3 PRODUCT AND CONTENT FLOWS

10 A Critical Analysis of Cultural Imperialism: From the Asian Frontlines, Dal Yong Jin

11 Hollywood's Presence in Latin America: Production Participation to Distribution Dominance, Tamara L. Falicov

12 Global Ugly Betty: International Format Trade and the Production of National Adaptations, Lothar Mikos and Marta Perrotta

13 The Comings and Goings of Key Scenarios: TV Fiction, Culture, and Transnational Flows in Postcolonial Kinshasa, Katrien Pype

PART 4 PRODUCTION WORK AND PRACTICES

14 Why Has News Production in the United States Remained Stable at a Time of Great Change?, David Michael Ryfe

15 The Production of Mediated Performance, Espen Ytreberg

16 Imagination and Censorship, Fiction and Reality: Producing a Telenovela in a Time of Political Crisis, Carolina Acosta-Alzuru

17 Distributed Creativity in Film and Television: Three Case Studies of Networked Production Labor

Introduction, John T. Caldwell

Aggregating Content/Disaggregating Labor in Tentpole TV, M. J. Clarke

Distributed Assistanthood: Dues-Paying Apprentices and “Desk Slaves,” Erin Hill

Sourcing Film Market Intelligence: Box Office Data, Tracking, and the Hollywood Stock Exchange, Eric Vanstrom

18 YouTube Stylo: Writing and Teaching with Digital Video, Alexandra Juhasz

PART 5 PRODUCTION CULTURES

19 Queer Broadcasts: Backstage Television, Insider Material, and Media Producers, Quinn Miller

20 Hollywood Elsewhere: The Runaway Locations Industry and Transnational Production Cultures, Serra Tinic

21 Transformations and Tactics: The Production Culture of the Hong Kong Film Industry, Sylvia J. Martin

22 Youth as Cultural Producers / Cultural Productions of Youth, Lora Taub-Pervizpour

PART 6 THE ETHICS OF PRODUCTION

23 “What's TV Good For?” Views of Producers of Television for Children around the World, Dafna Lemish

24 Is Media Work Good Work? A Case Study of Television Documentary, David Hesmondhalgh and Anna Zoellner

25 Community Media Production: Access, Institutions, and Ethics, Ellie Rennie

26 Neglected Elements: Production, Labor, and the Environment, Richard Maxwell and Toby Miller

Index

VOLUME III CONTENT AND REPRESENTATION

Contributors to Volume III

General Editor's Acknowledgments

Media Studies: The Interdiscipline of the Present and the Future, Angharad N. Valdivia

Technology, Convergence, and Power: Current Trends in Text-Based Approaches to Media Studies, Sharon R. Mazzarella

PART 1 PERSUASION AND INFORMATION

1 Understanding Hypercommercialized Media Texts, Matthew P. McAllister and Alexandra Nutter Smith

2 And Now a Click from Our Sponsors: Changes in Children's Advertising in the United States, Nancy A. Jennings

3 Women's Portraits Present in Print Fashion Advertisements: A Content Analysis of Spanish Fashion Magazines from 2002 to 2009, Paloma Diaz Soloaga and Carlos Muñiz

4 Marketing Militarism to Moms: News and Branding after September 11th, Mary Douglas Vavrus

5 From Second-Wave to Poststructuralist Feminism: Evolving Frameworks for Viewing Representations of Women's Sports, Marie Hardin and Erin Whiteside

6 “Honey-Drenched, Rags to Riches, Good versus Evil Stories”: The Telenovela as a Cultural Referent in the US Press, Guillermo Avila-Saavedra

7 Changes in the News Representation of Minorities Over the Course of 40 Years of Research, Eli Avraham

8 Is There Local Content on Television for Children Today?, Katalin Lustyik and Ruth Zanker

PART 2 ENTERTAINMENT

9 The Evolution of Hollywood Latinidad: Latina/o Representation and Stardom in US Entertainment Media, Mary C. Beltrán

10 Queer Gazing and the Popular: A Study on the Representational Strategies of Queer Representations in Popular Television Fiction, Sofie Van Bauwel, Frederik Dhaenens, and Daniel Biltereyst

11 Mediated Portrayals of Masculinities, Heather L. Hundley

12 Shifting Contours of Indian Womanhood in Popular Hindi Cinema, Sujata Moorti

13 Portrayals of Female Scientists in the Mass Media, Jocelyn Steinke

14 “She's the Real Thing”: Filming the Nostalgic Past through Vietnamese Women, Diem-My T. Bui

15 Chinese Cinema at the Millennium: Defining “China” and the Politics of Representation, Gina Marchetti

16 Violent Content on US Television: A Historical Overview of the Research, Nancy Signorielli

PART 3 INTERACTION AND PERFORMANCE

17 Blogging Culture: Content and Representation in Blogs, Zizi Papacharissi and Sharon Meraz

18 Blogging the Third Wave? Citizens' Media, Intimate Citizenship, and Everyday Life, Jenny Gunnarsson Payne

19 Videogame Content: Game, Text, or Something Else?, Mia Consalvo

20 Rethinking Violent Videogame Content: Conceptual Advances and Directions for Future Research, Kenneth A. Lachlan

21 Transmedial Aesthetics: Where Form and Content Meet – Film and Videogames, Tanya Krzywinska

22 Recent Trends in Research on Health Portrayals in the Media: From TV, Newspapers, and Magazines to Websites, YouTube, and Manga, James D. Robinson, Teresa L. Thompson, Jeanine Warisse Turner, Robert R. Agne, and Yan Tian

23 Canadian (Re)Presentation: Media, First Peoples, and Liveness in the Museum, Miranda J. Brady

24 Calypso and the Performance of Representational Politics, Susan Harewood

Index

VOLUME IV AUDIENCE AND INTERPRETATION

Contributors to Volume IV

Volume Editor's Acknowledgments

General Editor's Acknowledgments

Media Studies: The Interdiscipline of the Present and the Future, Angharad N. Valdivia

Studying the Elusive Audience: Consumers, Readers, Users, and Viewers in a Changing World, Radhika Parameswaran

PART 1 EXPANDING THE HORIZONS OF AUDIENCE STUDIES

1 The Audience in the Graduate Curriculum: Training Future Scholars, Meenakshi Gigi Durham

2 Fostering Surprise and Productive Discomfort in Audience Studies through Multi-Sited Ethnography, Kim Trager-Bohley

3 Studying Audiences with Sense-Making Methodology, CarrieLynn D. Reinhard and Brenda Dervin

4 The Abbreviated Field Experience in Audience Ethnography, Patrick D. Murphy

PART 2 PRACTICING REFLEXIVITY IN AND OUT OF THE FIELD

5 Studying Addiction: My Journey through the Landscape of Telenovela Consumption, Carolina Acosta-Alzuru

6 The Reflexive Self: The Expressive Subject in Makeover Television and Audience Research, Katherine Sender

7 Reflexivity in Data Analysis: Constructing Narratives of Family Digital Media Use In, Through, and For Public Engagement, Lynn Schofield Clark

8 Media Ethnography: Thickness and Force, Matt Briggs

9 Nomadic Scholarship: Translocal Approach to Audience Studies, Fabienne Darling-Wolf

PART 3 FINDING AND ENGAGING GLOBAL AUDIENCES

10 Mythic Viewing: Reality in Indian Audiencehood, Vamsee Juluri

11 “Unity in Diversity?”: South African Women's Reception of National and Global Images of Belonging, Shelley-Jean Bradfield

12 A Framework for Audience Study of Transnational Television, Chua Beng Huat

13 Language and Indian Film Audiences: From Political Economy to Ethnography, Sunitha Chitrapu

14 Watching Telenovelas in Brazil: Mediating the Everyday, Antonio C. La Pastina

15 China's Media Transformation and Audience Research, Hongmei Li

16 Using Ethnography to Understand Everyday Media Practices in Australian Family Life, Donell Holloway and Lelia Green

PART 4 COMPREHENDING ONLINE AUDIENCES

17 Beyond the Active Audience: Exploring New Media Audiences and the Limits of Cultural Production, Shayla Thiel-Stern

18 Counting, and Accounting for, Online Audiences, Fernando Bermejo

19 Always at Crossroads: Studying Online/Offline Intersections as a Postcolonial Feminist Researcher, Radhika Gajjala

20 Studying Online News Audiences: Trends, Issues, and Challenges, Deborah S. Chung

PART 5 EMPOWERING AUDIENCES AS CITIZENS

21 Health, Culture, and Power: Understanding Women Audiences of Health Media, Linda Aldoory

22 Participation Beyond Production: Possibilities for Reception and Ritual in the Study of Activist Audiences, Jennifer Rauch

23 Audiences as Citizens: Insights from Three Decades of Reception Research, Kim Christian Schrøder

24 Citizenship, Communication, and Modes of Audience Engagement: Exploring Alternative Voices in the Public Sphere, Christine L. Garlough and Dhavan V. Shah

Index

VOLUME V MEDIA EFFECTS/MEDIA PSYCHOLOGY

Contributors to Volume V

Volume Editor's Acknowledgments

General Editor's Acknowledgments

Media Studies: The Interdiscipline of the Present and the Future, Angharad N. Valdivia

Changes and Continuities in the Media Effects Paradigm, Erica Scharrer

PART 1 THEORIES AND PROCESSES/PROCESSING

I Theories of/about Effects

1 Mapping the Psychology of Agenda Setting, Maxwell McCombs and Jae Kook Lee

2 Cultivation Theory: Television Fiction as a Vector of Socialization, Jan Van den Bulck

3 Framing and Priming Effects: Exploring Challenges Connected to Cross-Level Approaches in Media Effects Research, Bertram T. Scheufele and Dietram A. Scheufele

4 Examining Media Effects: The General Aggression and General Learning Models, Christopher P. Barlett and Craig A. Anderson

5 Perceptions of Media and Media Effects: The Third-Person Effect, Trust in Media, and Hostile Media Perceptions, Yariv Tsfati and Jonathan Cohen

II Internal Mechanisms: Enjoyment, Appeal, and Physiological Response

6 Uses and Gratifications: A Social and Psychological Perspective of Media Use and Effects, Paul Haridakis

7 Media Entertainment as a Result of Recreation and Psychological Growth, Tilo Hartmann

8 Selective Exposure to Violent Media: A Synthesis of the Research and Theoretical Overview, Marina Krcmar

9 Media Message Processing and the Embodied Mind: Measuring Bodily Responses to Open the Black Box, Annie Lang

10 Thoughtless Vigilantes: Media Violence and Brain Activation Patterns in Young Viewers, John P. Murray

PART 2 EVIDENCE OF EFFECTS

III On Views of Self, Others, and Events

11 Gender-Role Socialization in the Twenty-First Century, Nancy Signorielli

12 Race and News Revisited: The Content and Effects of Problematically Framing the News, Travis L. Dixon and Christopher S. Josey

13 The Influence of Media Exposure on the Formation, Activation, and Application of Racial/Ethnic Stereotypes, Dana Mastro and Riva Tukachinsky

14 The Relationship between the Media, the Military, and the Public: Examining the Stories Told and Public Opinion, Michel M. Haigh

IV On Personal Health and Social Well-Being

15 Understanding the Role of Cognition and Media in Body Image Disturbance and Weight Bias in Children, Adolescents, and Adults, Kim Bissell

16 Tracing the Course of Reality TV Effects Research, Robin L. Nabi, Jiyeon So, and Theresa de los Santos

17 Media-Related Fear: Short-Term and Enduring Consequences, Cynthia A. Hoffner and Elizabeth L. Cohen

18 Callous/Malice: An Examination of Desensitizing and Aggression-Causing Media Effects, Ron Leone and Angela Paradise

19 Sex on Television: A Review of Socialization Effects and the Role of Context and Individual Differences, Kirstie M. Farrar

V In the Political Arena

20 Political TV Advertising and Debates, William L. Benoit and Jayne R. Henson

21 News and Political Entertainment Effects on Democratic Citizenship, Patricia Moy, Michael A. Xenos, and Muzammil M. Hussain

22 Exploring Relations between Political Entertainment Media and Traditional Political Communication Information Outlets: A Research Agenda, R. Lance Holbert and Dannagal Goldthwaite Young

23 Digital Democracy: How the Internet has Changed Politics, Leticia Bode, Stephanie Edgerly, Ben Sayre, Emily K. Vraga, and Dhavan V. Shah

VI On/Of Persuasion

24 Advances in Public Communication Campaigns, Charles K. Atkin and Ronald E. Rice

25 Effects of Social Marketing: Potential and Limitations, Michael D. Basil

26 Using Message Framing in Health-Related Persuasion: Theory and Evidence, Xiaoli Nan

27 The Intended and Unintended Effects of Advertising on Children, Moniek Buijzen and Patti M. Valkenburg

PART 3 THE YOUNG AUDIENCE

VII Media Use and Effects on Learning and Development

28 Media Use, Scholastic Achievement, and Attention Span, George Comstock

29 The Educational Impact of Television: Understanding Television's Potential and Limitations, Daniel R. Anderson, Heather J. Lavigne, and Katherine G. Hanson

30 Prosocial TV Content: Children's Interpretations and Responses, Marie-Louise Mares

31 The Effects of Internet Communication on Adolescents' Psychosocial Development: An Assessment of Risks and Opportunities, Jochen Peter and Patti M. Valkenburg

VIII Mediating and Mitigating Effects

32 Boom or Boomerang: A Critical Review of Evidence Documenting Media Literacy Efficacy, Smita C. Banerjee and Robert Kubey

33 The Role of Parental Mediation in the Development of Media Literacy and the Prevention of Substance Use, Yi-Chun (Yvonnes) Chen and Erica Weintraub Austin

34 The Impact of Media Policy on Children's Media Exposure, Amy B. Jordan

Index

VOLUME VI MEDIA STUDIES FUTURES

Contributors to Volume VI

General Editor's Acknowledgments

Media Studies: The Interdiscipline of the Present and the Future, Angharad N. Valdivia

Introduction: Media Studies Futures, Past and Present, Kelly Gates

PART 1 THE FUTURE OF MEDIA STUDIES: THEORY, METHODS, PEDAGOGY

1 Media Studies: Diagnostics of a Failed Merger, Geert Lovink

2 In Praise of Concept Production: Formats, Schools, and Nonrepresentational Media Studies, Geert Lovink and Ned Rossiter

3 Betting on YouTube Futures (for New Media Writing and Publishing), Alexandra Juhasz

4 Media Visualization: Visual Techniques for Exploring Large Media Collections, Lev Manovich

5 The Future of Game Studies, Mia Consalvo

6 The Study of the Internet in Latin America: Achievements, Challenges, Futures, Raúl Trejo Delarbre

PART 2 SOCIAL AND MOBILE MEDIA FUTURES

7 The Prehistoric Turn? Networked New Media, Mobility, and the Body, Mark Coté

8 The Waning Distinction between Private and Public: Net Locality and the Restructuring of Space, Adriana de Souza e Silva and Eric Gordon

9 How to Have Social Media in an Invisible Pandemic: Hepatitis C in the Time of H1N1, Lisa Cartwright

10 Mobile Handsets from the Bottom Up: Appropriation and Innovation in the Global South, Cara Wallis, Jack Linchuan Qiu, and Rich Ling

PART 3 MEDIA INDUSTRY AND INFRASTRUCTURE FUTURES

11 The End of James Cameron's Quiet Years, Charles R. Acland

12 Infrastructural Changeover: The US Digital TV Transition and Media Futures, Lisa Parks

13 The 800-Pound Gorillas in the Room: The Mobile Phone and the Future of Television, Max Dawson

14 Preemption, Premediation, Prediction: The Politics of Betting on the Future, Greg Elmer and Andy Opel

PART 4 JOURNALISM AND MEDIA POLICY FUTURES

15 The Decline of Modern Journalism in the Neo-Partisan Era, Richard Campbell

16 Reconstructing Accountability: Essential Journalistic Reorientations, Martin Eide

17 Mending the Gaps: Connecting Media Policy and Media Studies, Victor Pickard

PART 5 INTERACTIVITY, AFFECT, AND THE FUTURE OF MEDIA SUBJECTIVITIES

18 From Audiences to Media Subjectivities: Mutants in the Interregnum, Jack Z. Bratich

19 Future Directions for Political Communication Scholarship: Considering Emotion in Mediated Public Participation, Karin Wahl-Jorgensen

20 The Future of New Media: Embodying Kurzweil's Singularity in Dollhouse, Battlestar Galactica, and Gamer, David Golumbia

21 “It's a Nigger in Here! Kill the Nigger!”: User-Generated Media Campaigns Against Racism, Sexism, and Homophobia in Digital Games, Lisa Nakamura

22 From “The Ultimate Display” to “The Ultimate Skinner Box”: Virtual Reality and the Future of Psychotherapy, Marisa Brandt

PART 6 WHOSE FUTURE? CHILDREN, YOUTH CULTURES, AND DIGITAL MEDIA

23 Mapping ICT Adoption among Latin American Youth, Rosalía Winocur and Carolina Aguerre

24 South Asian Digital Diasporas: Remixing Diasporic Youth Cultures, Radhika Gajjala and Yeon Ju Oh

25 Fear and Hope: The Politics of Childhood and Mobile Media, Damien Spry

PART 7 WHAT FUTURE? OR, THE UNSUSTAINABLE PRESENT

26 Artificial Life on a Dead Planet, Charles Thorpe

27 The Dead-End of Consumerism: The Role of the Media and Cultural Industries, Justin Lewis

28 Media Armageddons and the Death of Liberal Biopolitics, Majia Holmer Nadesan

29 Greening Cultural Labor: The Future of Media Accounting, Richard Maxwell and Toby Miller

Index

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