 | Robert Waterman McChesney - Social Science - 2008 - 589 pages
The influence of media on society is unquestioned. Its reach penetrates nearly every corner of the world and every aspect of life. But it has also been a contested realm ... | |
 | Theodore Hamm - Social Science - 2011 - 240 pages
Is a new progressive era in American life in the offing? Only time will tell, but journalist Theodore Hamm's sharp, acerbic book suggests that a new progressive media has ... | |
 | Ben H. Bagdikian - Business & Economics - 2000 - 288 pages
Since this classic on corporate control of the media was first published in 1997, the number of corporations dominating our media has shrunk from fifty to merely five. Once ... | |
 | Danny Schechter - Political Science - 2005 - 173 pages
InThe Death of Media, Emmy Award-winning journalist Danny Schechter offers a blistering polemic about the unprecedented interest in media reformfrom protests by Pope John Paul ... | |
 | Kristina Börjesson - Language Arts & Disciplines - 2002 - 392 pages
Featuring a foreword by Gore Vidal, a penetrating collection of powerful essays, from award-winning print and TV journalists, details the perilous state of American journalism ... | |
 | James M. Fallows - 1996 - 296 pages
The Washington editor of The Atlantic Monthly and National Book Award-winning author of National Defense offers a critical analysis of American press coverage, explaining how ... | |
 | William Rugh - Social Science - 2004 - 259 pages
A long time observer of the Arab mass media offers a more nuanced picture of the Arab press as it relates to the political situation in the Arab world today. | |
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