Media/society : technology, industries, content, and users / David Croteau (Virginia Commonwealth University), William Hoynes (Vassar College).
Material type:
TextPublisher: Los Angeles : SAGE, [2019]Copyright date: �2019Edition: Sixth edition; International student editionDescription: xxii, 465 p: ill ; 24 cmContent type: - text
- still image
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781506390789
- 1506390781
- HN90.M3 C76
| Cover image | Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Materials specified | Vol info | URL | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | Item hold queue priority | Course reserves | |
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Books
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Ghana Armed Forces Command and Staff College General stacks | Reference | HN90.M3 C76 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 2024-1730 | |||||||||||||
Books
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Ghana Armed Forces Command and Staff College General stacks | Reference | HN90.M3 C76 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 2024-1731 |
Previous edition: 2014.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 373-413) and index.
PART I : INTRODUCTION : Chapter 1. Media/society in a digital world : The importance of media -- Models of communication media -- A sociology of media -- A model of media and the social world -- Applying the model: Civil rights in two media eras -- PART II : TECHNOLOGY : Chapter 2. The evolution of media technology : The history of media technology -- Technological determinism and social constructionism -- From print to the internet -- PART III : INDUSTRY : Chapter 3. The economics of the media industry : Media companies in the internet era -- Changing patterns of ownership -- Consequences of conglomeration and integration -- The effects of concentration -- Mass media for profit -- The impact of advertising -- Chapter 4. Political influence on media : Media and democracy -- Free speech to free markets: The evolution of U.S. regulatory policy -- Regulation in international perspective -- Competing interests and the regulation debate -- Regulating ownership -- Regulating content -- Regulating access and distribution -- Informal political, social, and economic pressure -- Chapter 5. Media organizations and professionals : The limits of economic and political constraints -- Decision making for profit: Imitation, hits, and stars -- The organization of media work -- Occupational roles and professional socialization -- Norms on the internet, new media, and new organizations -- PART IV : CONTENT : Chapter 6. Media and ideology -- What is ideology? -- Theoretical roots of ideological analysis -- News media and the limits of debate -- Movies, the military, and masculinity -- Television, popularity, and ideology -- Rap music as ideological critique? -- Advertising and consumer culture -- Advertising and the globalization of culture -- Internet ideology -- Chapter 7. Social inequality and media representation : Comparing media content and the "Real" world -- The significance of content -- Race, ethnicity, and media content: Inclusion, roles, and control -- Gender and media content -- Class and the media -- Sexual orientation: Out of the closet and into the media -- PART V : USERS : Chapter 8. Audiences and creators : The active audience: Balancing agency and structure -- Decoding meanings and social position -- The pleasures of media: Celebrity games -- The social context of media Use -- The limits of interpretation -- From active audience to resistant actors -- Content creation and distribution -- Chapter 9. Media influence : Learning from media effects research -- Early works: Establishing the agenda -- Mitigating media effects -- Highlighting media influence -- Mediatization -- The mediatization of politics -- Digital dilemmas: Online media influence -- PART VI : Afterword : Chapter 10. Globalization and the future of media -- What is globalization? -- The global media industry -- Interpreting global media content -- Regulating global media -- Global media users: Limits of the "Global Village" -- The ubiquity of change and the future of media.
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