|
1.
|
|
|
2.
|
|
|
3.
|
|
|
4.
|
|
|
5.
|
|
|
6.
|
|
|
7.
|
|
|
8.
|
|
|
9.
|
The Adoring audience : fan culture and popular media / edited by Lisa A. Lewis. by Lewis, Lisa A | Jenson, Joli. Fandom as pathology: the consequences of characterization | Fiske, John. The cultural economy of fandom | Grossberg, Lawrence. Is there a fan in the house?: the affective sensibility of fandom | Cline, Cheryl. Essays form bitch: the women's rock newsletter with bite | Ehrenreich, Barbara. Beatlemania: girls just want to have fun | Hess, Elizabeth. Beatlemania: girls just want to have fun | Jacobs, Gloria. Beatlemania: girls just want to have fun | Hinerman, Stephen. I'll be here with you: fans, fantasy and the figure of elvis | Lewis, Lisa A. "Something more than love": fan stories on film | Brower, Sue. Fans as tastemakers: viewers of quality television | Sabal, Robert. Television executives speak about fan letters to the networks | Fred. A glimpse of the fan factory | Vermorel, Judy. A glimpse of the fan factory | Jenkins, Henry. "Strangers no more, we sing": filking and the social construction of the science fiction fan community. Material type: Text; Format:
print
; Literary form:
Not fiction
Publisher: London ; New York : Routledge, 1992Availability: Items available for loan: Call number: 302.23 Ad 1992 c.2 (2). Damaged (1).
|
|
10.
|
Critical perspectives on media and society / editors, Robert K. Avery, David Eason. by Avery, Robert K | Eason, David | McQuail, Dennis. Reflections on uses and gratifications research | Carey, James W. Communications and the progressives | Schudson, Michael. The new validation of popular culture: sense and sentimentality in academia | Newcomb, Horace M. On the dialogic aspects of mass communication | Hall, Stuart. Signification, representation, ideology: althusser and the post-structuralist debates | Long, Elizabeth. Feminism and cultural studies | Grossberg, Lawrence. Strategies of Marxist cultural interpretation | Horwitz, Robert Britt. For whom the bell tolls: causes and consequences of the AT&T divestiture | Glasser, Theodore L. Investigative journalism and the moral order | Ettema, James S. Investigative journalism and the moral order | Birkhead, Douglas. An ethics of vision for journalism | Deming, Caren J. Hill Street Blues as narrative | Campbell, Richard. Securing the middle ground: reporter formulas in 60 Minutes | Gray, Herman. Television, black Americans, and the American dream | Barkin, Steve M. Out of work and on the air: television news of unemployment | Gurevitch, Michael. Out of work and on the air: television news of unemployment | Steiner, Linda. Oppositional decoding as an act of resistance | Fiske, John. Television: polysemy and popularity | Condit, Celeste Michelle. The rhetorical limits of polysemy | Spigel, Lynn. The domestic economy of television viewing in postwar America. Material type: Text; Format:
print
; Literary form:
Not fiction
Publisher: New York : Guilford Press, c1991Availability: Items available for loan: Call number: 302.23 Cr 1991 (1).
|
|
11.
|
Defining media studies : reflections on the future of the field / edited by Mark R. Levy and Michael Gurevitch. by Levy, Mark R | Gurevitch, Michael | Rosengren, Karl Erik. From field to frog ponds | Beniger, James R. Communication - embrace the subject, not the field | Craig, Robert T. Why are there so many communication theories? | Krippendorff, Klaus. The past of communication's hoped-for-future | Dervin, Brenda. Verbing communication: mandate for disciplinary invention | Meyrowitz, Joshua. Images of media: hidden ferment - and harmony - in the field | Jensen, Joli. The consequences of vocabularies | O'Keefe, Barbara. Against theory | Shepherd, Gregory J. Building a discipline of communication | Lang, Kurt. Perspectives on communication | Lang, Gladys Engel. Perspectives on communication | Mancini, Paolo. The legitimacy gap: a problem of mass media research in Europe and the United States | Babrow, Austin S. The advent of multiple-process theories of communication | Fitzpatrick, Mary Anne. Communication and the new world of relationships | Newcomb, Horace. Target practice: a batesonian "Field" guide for communication studies | Braman, Sandra. Harmonization of systems: the third stage of the information society | Davis, Dennis K. Beyond the culture wars: an agenda for research on communication and culture | Jasinkski, James. Beyond the culture wars: an agenda for research on communication and culture | Monahan, Jennifer L. The hierarchy of institutional values in the communication discipline | Collins-Jarvis, Lori. The hierarchy of institutional values in the communication discipline | Rothenbuhler, Eric W. Argument for a durkheimian theory of the communicative | Grunig, James E. Implications of public relations for other domains of communication | Avery, Robert K. Making a difference in the real world | Eadie, William F. Making a difference in the real world | Bennett, W. Lance. A policy research paradigm for the news media and democracy | Gomery, Douglas. The centrality of media economics | Noam, Eli. Reconnecting communications studies with communications policy | Rowland, Willard D. The traditions of communication research and their implications for telecommunications study | Steeves, H. Leslie. Creating imagined communities: development communication and the challenge of feminism | Docherty, David. Scholarship as silence | Morrison, David. Scholarship as silence | Tracey, Michael. Scholarship as silence | Livingstone, Sonia M. The rise and fall of audience research: an old story with a new ending | Morley, David. Active audience theory: pendulums and pitfalls | Jensen, Klaus Bruhn. The past in the future: problems and potentials of historical reception studies | Gans, Herbert J. Reopening the black box: toward a limited effects theory | Tuchman, Gaye. Realism and romance: the study of media effects | Geiger, Seth. Revealing the black box: information processing and media effects | Newhagen, John. Revealing the black box: information processing and media effects | Entman, Robert M. Framing: toward clarification of a fractured paradigm | Biocca, Frank. Communication research in the design of communication interfaces and systems | Youichi, Ito. The future of political communication research: a Japanese perspective | Zelizer, Barbie. Has communication explained journalism? | Grossberg, Lawrence. Can cultural studies find true happiness in communication? | McChesney, Robert W. Critical communication research at the crossroads | Meehan, Eileen R. Rethinking political economy: change and continuity | Mosco, Vincent. Rethinking political economy: change and continuity | Wasko, Janet. Rethinking political economy: change and continuity | Schiller, Dan. Back to the future: prospects for study of communication as a social force | Rogers, Everett M. The past and the future of communication study: convergence or divergence? An exchange | Chaffee, Steven H. The past and the future of communication study: convergence or divergence? An exchange | Peters, John Durham. Genealogical notes on "The Field" | Herbst, Susan. History, philosophy, and public opinion research | Shoemaker, Pamela J. Communication in crisis: theory, curricula, and power | Rakow, Lana F. The curriculum is the future | Swanson, David L. Fragmentation, the field, and the future | Kavoori, Anandam P. The purebred and the platypus: disciplinarity and site in mass communication research | Gurevitch, Michael. The purebred and the platypus: disciplinarity and site in mass communication research | de Melo, Jose Marques. Communication research: new challenges of the Latin American school. Material type: Text; Format:
print
; Literary form:
Not fiction
Publisher: New York : Oxford University Press, c1994Availability: Items available for loan: Call number: 302.2072 De 1994 (1). Damaged (1).
|