Media/society: technology, industries, content, and users
"Media/Society: Industries, Images, and Audiences provides a framework to help students understand the relationship between media and society and helps students develop skills for critically evaluating both conventional wisdom and one's own assumptions about the social role of the media. T...
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Los Angeles ; London ; New Delhi ; Singapore ; Washington DC ; Melbourne
SAGE
[2022]
|
Ausgabe: | Seventh edition |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | "Media/Society: Industries, Images, and Audiences provides a framework to help students understand the relationship between media and society and helps students develop skills for critically evaluating both conventional wisdom and one's own assumptions about the social role of the media. The Seventh Edition retains its basic sociological framwork, but also includes additional discussions of new studies and up-to-date material about a rapidly changing media landscape. This edition significantly expands on discussions of the "new media" world, including digitization, the Internet, and the spread of mobile media devices, and the role of user-generated content, the potential social impact of "new" media on society, and "new" media's effect on traditional media outlets. The new edition includes updated research, the latest industry data, and current examples from popular media, which will help to illustrate enduring themes in the sociology of media"-- |
Beschreibung: | xviii, 497 Seiten Illustrationen |
ISBN: | 9781071819357 1071819356 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Brief Contents ******···**·····*···*····················»*········*················· Preface xv Acknowledgments PART I INTRODUCTION Chapter 1 PART II Media/Society in a Digital World TECHNOLOGY xvii 1 3 27 Chapter 2 The Evolution of Media Technology 29 PART III INDUSTRY 71 Chapter 3 The Economics of the Media Industry 73 Chapter 4 Political Influence on Media 121 Chapter 5 Media Organizations and Professionals 171 PART IV CONTENT: MEDIA REPRESENTATIONS OF THE SOCIAL WORLD 21 1 Chapter 6 Media and Ideology 213 Chapter 7 Social Inequality andMedia Representation 253 PART V USERS 297 Chapter 8 Audiences and Creators 299 Chapter 9 Media Influence 333 PART VI AFTERWORD 379 Chapter 10 Globalization and the Future of Media 381 References 415 Index 455 About the Authors 497
Detailed Contents Preface xv Acknowledgments PART I INTRODUCTION Chapter 1 Media/Society in a Digital World The Importance of Media xvii 1 3 4 Models of Communication Media Interpersonal and “Mass” Communication Variable Boundaries and Active Users Communication Today: A First Look 9 9 10 11 A Sociology of Media The Sociological Perspective Structural Constraint and Human Agency 13 13 14 14 15 16 17 17 18 Structure Agency Structure and Agency in the Media Relationships between the Media and Other Social Institutions Relationships within the Media Industry Relationships between the Media and the Public A Model of Media and the Social World 19 Applying the Model: Civil Rights in Two Media Eras Mid-20th-Century Civil Rights Movement Black Lives Matter 21 21 24 Conclusion 25 Discussion Questions 26 PART II TECHNOLOGY Chapter 2 The Evolution of Media Technology 27 29 The History of Media Technology 29 Technological Determinism Media’s Materiality Autonomous Technology” and “Technological Momentum” Medium Theory 33 34 35 36 McLuhan’s Optimism Postman’s Pessimism 37 38
Social Constructionism 40 From Print to Television The Print Medium 42 42 44 44 The Telegraph The Telephone Sound Recording Film and Video 48 51 Radio Broadcasting Television 53 57 Television and Daily Life 58 Cable Television 60 The Internet Creating the Internet The Internet Grows Up Some Characteristics of the Internet Era 62 62 65 66 Conclusion 68 Discussion Questions 69 PART III INDUSTRY 71 Chapter 3 The Economics of theMedia Industry 73 Media Companies in the Internet Era Products Platforms Pipes 74 75 76 77 Changing Patterns of Ownership Concentration of Ownership 78 79 Products Platforms Pipes Conglomeration and Integration Strategy in a New Media Economy The Power of Platforms: Facebook and Google as New Media Giants Users Media Content Advertising and Paywaiis Telecommunications 80 84 85 85 89 90 91 91 92 94 Consequences of Conglomerationand Integration Integration and Self-Promotion The Impact of Conglomeration 94 95 95 The Effects of Concentration Media Control and Political Power Media Ownership and Content Diversity 97 97 101
Mass Media for Profit Prime-Time Profits Cheaper Programs for Smaller Audiences Controlling Content and Distribution Profit and the News Media 104 104 106 107 108 The Impact of Advertising The Advertising-Content Connection Advertising and the Press in the 19th Century 110 111 113 113 114 115 The British Press The U.S. Press Advertising and the Contemporary News Media Conclusion 118 Discussion Questions 119 Chapter 4 Political Influence on Media 121 Media and Democracy 121 Free Speech to Free Markets: The Evolution of U.S. Regulatory Policy Regulate or Deregulate? The FCC s Variable Role 123 124 125 Regulation in International Perspective Regulation in Western Democracies Regulation in Developing Nations 128 128 130 Competing Interests and the Regulation Debate Industry Influence: Elections and Lobbying Citizen Action: The Case of Low-Power Radio Left and Right: Diversity versus Property Rights 131 131 133 135 Regulating Ownership Media Outlets Copyright and Intellectual Property 137 137 140 Regulating Content Accuracy: Advertising Diversity.· The Fairness Doctrine Morality: Obscene Materials Self-Regulation: Censorship and Ratings 143 143 144 146 147 147 149 Movie Censorship and the Ratings System Television Ratings Music Parental Advisory Labels and Video Games The National Interest”: Military Censorship Regulating Access and Distribution Net Neutrality The Concept of Net Neutrality The Policy Battle The Implications 151 151 154 154 154 155 156
Vertical Integration: Movies, TV, and Streaming The Hollywood Studio System Television s Fin-Syn Regulations Netflix and the Streaming Wars Social Media Platforms 157 157 158 159 160 What Are Platforms? 161 Social Media Regulation 162 165 Self-Policing Informal Political, Social, and EconomicPressure 166 Conclusion 168 Discussion Questions 169 Chapter 5 Media Organizations and Professionals 171 The Limits of Economic and Political Constraints Working within Economic Constraints Responding to Political Constraints 171 172 173 Decision Making for Profit: Imitation, Hits, and Stars High Costs and Unpredictable Tastes Art Imitating Art Stars and the “Hit System Creating Hits and Producing Stars Using Stars to Combat Uncertainty Beyond Stars to a Universe of Products 174 174 176 177 178 179 181 The Organization of Media Work Conventions News Routines and Their Consequences Technology and the New News Routines 182 182 184 187 increased Economic Pressure Expanded Volume and Diversified Sourcing Increased Speed Presentation and Engagement to Promote Traffic Newsroom A utómation Objectivity The Origins of Objectivity 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 Objectivity as Routine Practices and Their Political Consequences Rejecting Objectivity: Alternative Journalism Occupational Roles and Professional Socialization Roles Photography Socialization of Photographers Editorial Decision Making 194 195 197 197 199 200 201 The Work of the Book Editor 202 Scholarly Publishing 204
Norms on the Internet, New Media, and New Organizations 206 Conclusion 209 Discussion Questions 210 PART IV CONTENT: MEDIA REPRESENTATIONS OF THE SOCIAL WORLD 21 1 Chapter 6 Media and Ideology 213 What Is Ideology? Ideology and the “Real” World Dominant Ideology versus Cultural Contradictions The “Culture War Battles over Ideology Ideology as Normalization 213 213 215 216 217 Theoretical Roots of Ideological Analysis Early Marxist Origins Hegemony 218 219 220 News Media and the Limits of Debate Elites and Insiders Economic News as Ideological Construct 224 225 226 Movies, the Military, and Masculinity Action-Adventure Films Vietnam Films and Recent War Films 228 229 230 Television, Popularity, and Ideology Television and Reality Television and the Changing American Family Revising Tradition: The New Momism 232 233 235 238 Rap Music as Ideological Critique? 239 Advertising and Consumer Culture Selling Consumerism in the Early 20th Century 242 244 Advertising and the Globalization of Culture 245 Internet Ideology 248 Conclusion 250 Discussion Questions 251 Chapter 7 Social Inequality and Media Representation 253 Comparing Media Content and the “Real” World 254 The Significance of Content Content as Reflection of Producers Content as Reflection of Audience Preference Content as Reflection of Society in General Content as an Influence on Audiences Content as Self-Enclosed Text 256 256 257 257 257 258
Race, Ethnicity, and Media Content: Inclusion, Roles, and Control Racial and Ethnic Diversity in Media Content 258 260 Television 260 260 Advertising 262 Film Video Games Growing Diversity and Abundance amid Audience Fragmentation Race, Ethnicity, and Media Roles Early Images of Race Slow Change and “Modern” Racism Race and Class Controlling Media Images of Race 262 263 266 266 267 272 273 Gender and Media Content Women: Presence and Control in the Media Changing Media Roles for Women . . . and Men The Case of Women’s Sports 275 276 277 279 Class and the Media Class and Media Content 281 281 Family-Based Situation Comedies Tabloid Talk Shows and Reality Television The Union Taboo News Media Advertising Explaining Class Images: “Some People Are More Valuable Than Others” 282 285 286 287 289 290 Sexual Orientation: Out of the Closet and into the Media 292 Conclusion 296 Discussion Questions 296 PART V Chapter 8 USERS Audiences and Creators 297 299 The Active Audience: Balancing Agency and Structure Polysemy: Media’s Multiple Meanings Interpretive Constraint: Encoding/Decoding and Social Structure 299 300 302 Decoding Meanings and Social Position Class and Nationwide News Gender, Class, and Television Race, News, and Meaning Making Resistance and Feminist Identity International Readings of Literature Making Meaning Online: Second Screens Social Position Online: Black Twitter 303 303 304 305 307 308 309 310
The Social Context of Media Use The Pleasures of Media: Celebrity Games Romance Novels and the Act of Reading Watching Television with the Family 312 312 314 315 The Limits of Interpretation Interpretive Resistance and Feminist Politics Culture Jamming 316 318 319 Content Creation and Distribution Participatory Culture Participation Online Who Are the Content Creators? Why Create? Media Fans Users as Gatekeepers and Distributors 320 321 322 324 325 326 328 Conclusion 330 Discussion Questions 331 Chapter 9 Media Influence 333 Learning from Media Effects Research 333 Early Works: Establishing the Agenda The Press and Democracy Entertainment and Children Mass Society and Media Influence 335 335 336 337 Mitigating Media Effects Limited Effects and the Two-Step Flow of Influence Active Audiences 338 338 340 Highlighting Media Influence Agenda Setting and Framing 340 341 342 342 343 345 346 Framing: Second-Level Agenda Setting New Agenda-Setting Players in the Internet Era The Spiral of Silence Learning from Media Cultivation Theory Mediatization The Concept of Mediatization The Mediatization of Society and Media Logic 347 348 349 The Mediatization of Politics The Politics of Image 351 352 352 354 355 356 Political Actors Setting the Stage The Decline of Political Parties Communication Professionals and “Post-Truth” Politics Working with the News Media Using the Internet 357 358
Social Movements Citizen Alienation The Internet s Uncertain Political Future 360 362 363 Digital Dilemmas: Online Media Influence Social Media Logic and Algorithmic Power The Crisis in Journalism Information Distortions: Misinformation and Echo Chambers Computational Propaganda: Trolls and Twitter Bots Hate and Censorship Managing Our Social Selves 364 364 367 369 371 373 375 Conclusion 378 Discussion Questions 378 PART VI Chapter 10 AFTERWORD Globalization and the Future of Media 379 381 What Is Globalization? Crossing Limits of Time and Space Crossing Cultural Boundaries The Promise and Reality of Media Globalization 382 383 384 385 The Global Media Industry Global Products, Centralized Ownership Traditional Media: Disney Worldwide The New Global Media Giants: Google and Facebook 387 387 389 392 Interpreting Global Media Content Cultural Imperialism and Its Limits Global Culture Clash? Hybrid Culture 395 395 398 398 Regulating Global Media The Politics of Information Flow Internet Governance Preserving Diversity 401 401 404 405 Global Media Users: Limits of the Global Village” 408 The Ubiquity of Change and the Future of Media 411 Discussion Questions 413 References 415 Index 455 About the Authors 497
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adam_txt |
Brief Contents ******···**·····*···*····················»*········*················· Preface xv Acknowledgments PART I INTRODUCTION Chapter 1 PART II Media/Society in a Digital World TECHNOLOGY xvii 1 3 27 Chapter 2 The Evolution of Media Technology 29 PART III INDUSTRY 71 Chapter 3 The Economics of the Media Industry 73 Chapter 4 Political Influence on Media 121 Chapter 5 Media Organizations and Professionals 171 PART IV CONTENT: MEDIA REPRESENTATIONS OF THE SOCIAL WORLD 21 1 Chapter 6 Media and Ideology 213 Chapter 7 Social Inequality andMedia Representation 253 PART V USERS 297 Chapter 8 Audiences and Creators 299 Chapter 9 Media Influence 333 PART VI AFTERWORD 379 Chapter 10 Globalization and the Future of Media 381 References 415 Index 455 About the Authors 497
Detailed Contents Preface xv Acknowledgments PART I INTRODUCTION Chapter 1 Media/Society in a Digital World The Importance of Media xvii 1 3 4 Models of Communication Media Interpersonal and “Mass” Communication Variable Boundaries and Active Users Communication Today: A First Look 9 9 10 11 A Sociology of Media The Sociological Perspective Structural Constraint and Human Agency 13 13 14 14 15 16 17 17 18 Structure Agency Structure and Agency in the Media Relationships between the Media and Other Social Institutions Relationships within the Media Industry Relationships between the Media and the Public A Model of Media and the Social World 19 Applying the Model: Civil Rights in Two Media Eras Mid-20th-Century Civil Rights Movement Black Lives Matter 21 21 24 Conclusion 25 Discussion Questions 26 PART II TECHNOLOGY Chapter 2 The Evolution of Media Technology 27 29 The History of Media Technology 29 Technological Determinism Media’s Materiality "Autonomous Technology” and “Technological Momentum” Medium Theory 33 34 35 36 McLuhan’s Optimism Postman’s Pessimism 37 38
Social Constructionism 40 From Print to Television The Print Medium 42 42 44 44 The Telegraph The Telephone Sound Recording Film and Video 48 51 Radio Broadcasting Television 53 57 Television and Daily Life 58 Cable Television 60 The Internet Creating the Internet The Internet Grows Up Some Characteristics of the Internet Era 62 62 65 66 Conclusion 68 Discussion Questions 69 PART III INDUSTRY 71 Chapter 3 The Economics of theMedia Industry 73 Media Companies in the Internet Era Products Platforms Pipes 74 75 76 77 Changing Patterns of Ownership Concentration of Ownership 78 79 Products Platforms Pipes Conglomeration and Integration Strategy in a New Media Economy The Power of Platforms: Facebook and Google as New Media Giants Users Media Content Advertising and Paywaiis Telecommunications 80 84 85 85 89 90 91 91 92 94 Consequences of Conglomerationand Integration Integration and Self-Promotion The Impact of Conglomeration 94 95 95 The Effects of Concentration Media Control and Political Power Media Ownership and Content Diversity 97 97 101
Mass Media for Profit Prime-Time Profits Cheaper Programs for Smaller Audiences Controlling Content and Distribution Profit and the News Media 104 104 106 107 108 The Impact of Advertising The Advertising-Content Connection Advertising and the Press in the 19th Century 110 111 113 113 114 115 The British Press The U.S. Press Advertising and the Contemporary News Media Conclusion 118 Discussion Questions 119 Chapter 4 Political Influence on Media 121 Media and Democracy 121 Free Speech to Free Markets: The Evolution of U.S. Regulatory Policy Regulate or Deregulate? The FCC's Variable Role 123 124 125 Regulation in International Perspective Regulation in Western Democracies Regulation in Developing Nations 128 128 130 Competing Interests and the Regulation Debate Industry Influence: Elections and Lobbying Citizen Action: The Case of Low-Power Radio Left and Right: Diversity versus Property Rights 131 131 133 135 Regulating Ownership Media Outlets Copyright and Intellectual Property 137 137 140 Regulating Content Accuracy: Advertising Diversity.· The Fairness Doctrine Morality: Obscene Materials Self-Regulation: Censorship and Ratings 143 143 144 146 147 147 149 Movie Censorship and the Ratings System Television Ratings Music Parental Advisory Labels and Video Games The "National Interest”: Military Censorship Regulating Access and Distribution Net Neutrality The Concept of Net Neutrality The Policy Battle The Implications 151 151 154 154 154 155 156
Vertical Integration: Movies, TV, and Streaming The Hollywood Studio System Television's Fin-Syn Regulations Netflix and the Streaming Wars Social Media Platforms 157 157 158 159 160 What Are Platforms? 161 Social Media Regulation 162 165 Self-Policing Informal Political, Social, and EconomicPressure 166 Conclusion 168 Discussion Questions 169 Chapter 5 Media Organizations and Professionals 171 The Limits of Economic and Political Constraints Working within Economic Constraints Responding to Political Constraints 171 172 173 Decision Making for Profit: Imitation, Hits, and Stars High Costs and Unpredictable Tastes Art Imitating Art Stars and the “Hit System" Creating Hits and Producing Stars Using Stars to Combat Uncertainty Beyond Stars to a Universe of Products 174 174 176 177 178 179 181 The Organization of Media Work Conventions News Routines and Their Consequences Technology and the New News Routines 182 182 184 187 increased Economic Pressure Expanded Volume and Diversified Sourcing Increased Speed Presentation and Engagement to Promote Traffic Newsroom A utómation Objectivity The Origins of Objectivity 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 Objectivity as Routine Practices and Their Political Consequences Rejecting Objectivity: Alternative Journalism Occupational Roles and Professional Socialization Roles Photography Socialization of Photographers Editorial Decision Making 194 195 197 197 199 200 201 The Work of the Book Editor 202 Scholarly Publishing 204
Norms on the Internet, New Media, and New Organizations 206 Conclusion 209 Discussion Questions 210 PART IV CONTENT: MEDIA REPRESENTATIONS OF THE SOCIAL WORLD 21 1 Chapter 6 Media and Ideology 213 What Is Ideology? Ideology and the “Real” World Dominant Ideology versus Cultural Contradictions The “Culture War" Battles over Ideology Ideology as Normalization 213 213 215 216 217 Theoretical Roots of Ideological Analysis Early Marxist Origins Hegemony 218 219 220 News Media and the Limits of Debate Elites and Insiders Economic News as Ideological Construct 224 225 226 Movies, the Military, and Masculinity Action-Adventure Films Vietnam Films and Recent War Films 228 229 230 Television, Popularity, and Ideology Television and Reality Television and the Changing American Family Revising Tradition: The New Momism 232 233 235 238 Rap Music as Ideological Critique? 239 Advertising and Consumer Culture Selling Consumerism in the Early 20th Century 242 244 Advertising and the Globalization of Culture 245 Internet Ideology 248 Conclusion 250 Discussion Questions 251 Chapter 7 Social Inequality and Media Representation 253 Comparing Media Content and the “Real” World 254 The Significance of Content Content as Reflection of Producers Content as Reflection of Audience Preference Content as Reflection of Society in General Content as an Influence on Audiences Content as Self-Enclosed Text 256 256 257 257 257 258
Race, Ethnicity, and Media Content: Inclusion, Roles, and Control Racial and Ethnic Diversity in Media Content 258 260 Television 260 260 Advertising 262 Film Video Games Growing Diversity and Abundance amid Audience Fragmentation Race, Ethnicity, and Media Roles Early Images of Race Slow Change and “Modern” Racism Race and Class Controlling Media Images of Race 262 263 266 266 267 272 273 Gender and Media Content Women: Presence and Control in the Media Changing Media Roles for Women . . . and Men The Case of Women’s Sports 275 276 277 279 Class and the Media Class and Media Content 281 281 Family-Based Situation Comedies Tabloid Talk Shows and Reality Television The Union Taboo News Media Advertising Explaining Class Images: “Some People Are More Valuable Than Others” 282 285 286 287 289 290 Sexual Orientation: Out of the Closet and into the Media 292 Conclusion 296 Discussion Questions 296 PART V Chapter 8 USERS Audiences and Creators 297 299 The Active Audience: Balancing Agency and Structure Polysemy: Media’s Multiple Meanings Interpretive Constraint: Encoding/Decoding and Social Structure 299 300 302 Decoding Meanings and Social Position Class and Nationwide News Gender, Class, and Television Race, News, and Meaning Making Resistance and Feminist Identity International Readings of Literature Making Meaning Online: Second Screens Social Position Online: Black Twitter 303 303 304 305 307 308 309 310
The Social Context of Media Use The Pleasures of Media: Celebrity Games Romance Novels and the Act of Reading Watching Television with the Family 312 312 314 315 The Limits of Interpretation Interpretive Resistance and Feminist Politics Culture Jamming 316 318 319 Content Creation and Distribution Participatory Culture Participation Online Who Are the Content Creators? Why Create? Media Fans Users as Gatekeepers and Distributors 320 321 322 324 325 326 328 Conclusion 330 Discussion Questions 331 Chapter 9 Media Influence 333 Learning from Media Effects Research 333 Early Works: Establishing the Agenda The Press and Democracy Entertainment and Children Mass Society and Media Influence 335 335 336 337 Mitigating Media Effects Limited Effects and the Two-Step Flow of Influence Active Audiences 338 338 340 Highlighting Media Influence Agenda Setting and Framing 340 341 342 342 343 345 346 Framing: Second-Level Agenda Setting New Agenda-Setting Players in the Internet Era The Spiral of Silence Learning from Media Cultivation Theory Mediatization The Concept of Mediatization The Mediatization of Society and Media Logic 347 348 349 The Mediatization of Politics The Politics of Image 351 352 352 354 355 356 Political Actors Setting the Stage The Decline of Political Parties Communication Professionals and “Post-Truth” Politics Working with the News Media Using the Internet 357 358
Social Movements Citizen Alienation The Internet's Uncertain Political Future 360 362 363 Digital Dilemmas: Online Media Influence Social Media Logic and Algorithmic Power The Crisis in Journalism Information Distortions: Misinformation and Echo Chambers Computational Propaganda: Trolls and Twitter Bots Hate and Censorship Managing Our Social Selves 364 364 367 369 371 373 375 Conclusion 378 Discussion Questions 378 PART VI Chapter 10 AFTERWORD Globalization and the Future of Media 379 381 What Is Globalization? Crossing Limits of Time and Space Crossing Cultural Boundaries The Promise and Reality of Media Globalization 382 383 384 385 The Global Media Industry Global Products, Centralized Ownership Traditional Media: Disney Worldwide The New Global Media Giants: Google and Facebook 387 387 389 392 Interpreting Global Media Content Cultural Imperialism and Its Limits Global Culture Clash? Hybrid Culture 395 395 398 398 Regulating Global Media The Politics of Information Flow Internet Governance Preserving Diversity 401 401 404 405 Global Media Users: Limits of the "Global Village” 408 The Ubiquity of Change and the Future of Media 411 Discussion Questions 413 References 415 Index 455 About the Authors 497 |
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author | Croteau, David Hoynes, William Childress, Clayton |
author_GND | (DE-588)1160603677 (DE-588)1160603774 (DE-588)1139383361 |
author_facet | Croteau, David Hoynes, William Childress, Clayton |
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edition | Seventh edition |
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geographic | USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd |
geographic_facet | USA |
id | DE-604.BV047348658 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T17:37:02Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:09:39Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781071819357 1071819356 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-032750897 |
oclc_num | 1284791912 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-824 DE-M339 DE-739 |
owner_facet | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-824 DE-M339 DE-739 |
physical | xviii, 497 Seiten Illustrationen |
publishDate | 2022 |
publishDateSearch | 2022 |
publishDateSort | 2022 |
publisher | SAGE |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Croteau, David Verfasser (DE-588)1160603677 aut Media/society technology, industries, content, and users David Croteau, William Hoynes, Clayton C. Childress Seventh edition Los Angeles ; London ; New Delhi ; Singapore ; Washington DC ; Melbourne SAGE [2022] © 2022 xviii, 497 Seiten Illustrationen txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier "Media/Society: Industries, Images, and Audiences provides a framework to help students understand the relationship between media and society and helps students develop skills for critically evaluating both conventional wisdom and one's own assumptions about the social role of the media. The Seventh Edition retains its basic sociological framwork, but also includes additional discussions of new studies and up-to-date material about a rapidly changing media landscape. This edition significantly expands on discussions of the "new media" world, including digitization, the Internet, and the spread of mobile media devices, and the role of user-generated content, the potential social impact of "new" media on society, and "new" media's effect on traditional media outlets. The new edition includes updated research, the latest industry data, and current examples from popular media, which will help to illustrate enduring themes in the sociology of media"-- Massenmedien (DE-588)4037877-9 gnd rswk-swf Gesellschaft (DE-588)4020588-5 gnd rswk-swf USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf Mass media / Social aspects / United States Mass media / Political aspects / United States Mass media / Political aspects Mass media / Social aspects United States USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g Massenmedien (DE-588)4037877-9 s Gesellschaft (DE-588)4020588-5 s DE-604 Hoynes, William Verfasser (DE-588)1160603774 aut Childress, Clayton Verfasser (DE-588)1139383361 aut Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, EPUB 978-1-0718-1934-0 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, EPUB 978-1-0718-1932-6 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, PDF 978-1-0718-1931-9 Digitalisierung UB Bamberg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032750897&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Croteau, David Hoynes, William Childress, Clayton Media/society technology, industries, content, and users Massenmedien (DE-588)4037877-9 gnd Gesellschaft (DE-588)4020588-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4037877-9 (DE-588)4020588-5 (DE-588)4078704-7 |
title | Media/society technology, industries, content, and users |
title_auth | Media/society technology, industries, content, and users |
title_exact_search | Media/society technology, industries, content, and users |
title_exact_search_txtP | Media/society technology, industries, content, and users |
title_full | Media/society technology, industries, content, and users David Croteau, William Hoynes, Clayton C. Childress |
title_fullStr | Media/society technology, industries, content, and users David Croteau, William Hoynes, Clayton C. Childress |
title_full_unstemmed | Media/society technology, industries, content, and users David Croteau, William Hoynes, Clayton C. Childress |
title_short | Media/society |
title_sort | media society technology industries content and users |
title_sub | technology, industries, content, and users |
topic | Massenmedien (DE-588)4037877-9 gnd Gesellschaft (DE-588)4020588-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Massenmedien Gesellschaft USA |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032750897&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT croteaudavid mediasocietytechnologyindustriescontentandusers AT hoyneswilliam mediasocietytechnologyindustriescontentandusers AT childressclayton mediasocietytechnologyindustriescontentandusers |