This book offers the systematic, critically informed political and institutional study of television yet published in the United States. It evaluates the contradictory influence of television, a medium that has dramatized conflicts within society and has on occasion led to valuable social criticism.
This book offers the systematic, critically informed political and institutional study of television yet published in the United States. It evaluates the contradictory influence of television, a medium that has dramatized conflicts within society and has on occasion led to valuable social criticism.
Ann Cvetkovich is associate professor of English and Douglas Kellner is professor of philosophy, both at the University of Texas at Austin.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface and Acknowledgments Toward a Critical Theory of Television Broadcasting and the Rise of Network Television Television, Government, and Business: Toward a Critical/Institutional Theory Television, Politics, and the Making of Conservative Hegemony Alternatives Appendixes
Preface and Acknowledgments Toward a Critical Theory of Television Broadcasting and the Rise of Network Television Television, Government, and Business: Toward a Critical/Institutional Theory Television, Politics, and the Making of Conservative Hegemony Alternatives Appendixes
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