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Communication Speech ....................................................................................1
Business Communication ......................................................................................................... 7
Communication Theory ............................................................................................................ 8
Gender Communication ......................................................................................................... 10
Intercultural Communication ................................................................................................... 10
Interpersonal Communication .................................................................................................. 4
Interpersonal Conict ............................................................................................................... 5
Interviewing .............................................................................................................................. 7
Introduction to Communication ................................................................................................. 2
Public Speaking ........................................................................................................................ 1
Research Methods ................................................................................................................... 9
Small Group Communication ................................................................................................... 5
Visual Communication .............................................................................................................. 6
Mass Communication .........................................................................................11
Introduction to Electronic Media ............................................................................................. 15
Introduction to Mass Communication ..................................................................................... 11
Introduction to Mass Communication Readers ................................................................... 13
Media Writing ......................................................................................................................... 16
J ournalism ..........................................................................................................17
Broadcast News Writing and Production ................................................................................ 17
Public Relations & Advertising ................................................................................................ 18
Newspaper & Magazine Design / Layout ............................................................................... 18
News Writing & Reporting ...................................................................................................... 17
Media, Film & Cultural Studies ...........................................................................20
Cultural Studies ...................................................................................................................... 30
Film & Television Studies ....................................................................................................... 20
J ournalism .............................................................................................................................. 28
Media Studies ......................................................................................................................... 24
New Media ............................................................................................................................. 22
Popular Music ......................................................................................................................... 33
Science & Culture ................................................................................................................... 30
Sports Studies ........................................................................................................................ 28
New Ti t l es
ii
COMMUNI CATI ON SPEECH
2013 Author ISBN Page
Human Communication Principles and Contexts, 13e Tubbs 9780078036781 2
2012
Communicating in Groups: Applications and Skills, 8e Adams 9780073534275 5
Seeing is Believing, 4e Berger 9780073512020 6
Interpersonal Communication, 2e Floyd 9780073406756 4
Communication Works, 11e Gamble 9780078036811 2
First Look at Communication Theory, A, 8e Griffin 9780073534305 8
Art of Public Speaking, The, 11e Lucas 9780073406732 1
iSpeak: Public Speaking for Contemporary Life: 2011 Edition, 5e Nelson 9780077309534 2
Bridges Not Walls: A Book About Interpersonal Communication, 11e Stewart 9780073534312 4
Systems Approach to Small Group Interaction, A, 11e Tubbs 9780073534329 6
MASS COMMUNI CATI ON
2013
Taking Sides: Clashing Views in Mass Media and Society, 12e Alexander 9780078050411 13
Media Writers Handbook: A Guide to Common Writing Arnold 9780073512006 16
and Editing Problems, 6e
Dynamics of Mass Communication: Media in Transition, 12e Dominick 9780073526195 11
Annual Editions: Mass Media 12/13, 18e Gorham 9780078051241 14
2012
Taking Sides: Clashing Views in Mass Media and Society Expanded, 11e Alexander 9780078050152 14
Introduction to Mass Communication Media Literacy and Culture, 7e Baran 9780073526157 11
Broadcasting Cable the Internet and Beyond: An Introduction to Modern Dominick 9780073512037 15
Electronic Media, 7e
Annual Editions: Mass Media 11/12, 17e Gorham 9780078050909 14
Mass Media in a Changing World, 4e Rodman 9780073512013 12
iii
New Ti t l es
J OURNALI SM
2013 Author ISBN Page
Media Writers Handbook: A Guide to Common Writing Arnold 9780073512006 17
and Editing Problems, 6e
Inside Reporting, 3e Harrower 9780073526171 17
Newspaper Designers Handbook, The, 7e Harrower 9780073512044 18
2012
Public Relations the Profession and the Practice, 4e Lattimore 9780073512051 18
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Public Speaking of The Art
Stephen E. Lucas
Tenth Edition


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their speeches. With Connect Lucas, students
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Communi c at i on Speec h
1
Publ i c Speak i ng
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
NEW
*9780073406732*
THE ART OF PUBLI C SPEAKI NG
11t h Edi t i on
Stephen E Lucas, University of Wisc Madison
2012 / 480 pages
ISBN: 9780073406732
ISBN: 9780071314671 [IE]
Available: October 2011
www.mhhe.com/lucas11e
The Art of Public Speaking 11e continues to dene the art of being
the best by helping todays students become capable, responsible
speakers and thinkers. Throughout the program, students move from
theory to practice to internalize the principles of public speaking, build
condence through speech practice, and prepare for success in the
classroom and beyond. With the new Enhanced Speech Capture in
Connect Lucas, instructors now have the ability to evaluate speeches
live, in the classroom, using a customizable rubric. Instructors may
also upload speech videos on students behalf and create and manage
true peer review assignments. With its ground-breaking adaptive
learning system, Connect Lucas also helps students know what
they know while guiding them to experience and learn important
concepts that they need to know for success now and in the future.
With McGraw-Hill Create Reow, instructors can now customize
their Lucas 11e textbook to the section level, selecting and arranging
only the sections covered in the course. The new Reow system will
automatically repaginate and re-number chapters, sections, graphs,
and illustrations, based on how the instructor chooses to arrange
them. This deep level of customization guarantees that students pay
only for the content covered in the course.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
Hands-on assignments and activities in Connect Lucas help v
link public-speaking principles to the practice and application
of those concepts. This fully revised iteration of Connect Lucas
offers a wide range of assignable and assessable online activities:
questions accompanying student speech videos, review questions
and chapter quizzes, exercises for critical thinking, outlining and key
terms exercises, online checklists and worksheets.
Enhanced Speech Capture v in Connect Lucas gives instructors
the ability to evaluate speeches live using a fully customizable rubric.
Instructors may also upload speech videos for the students, create
and manage peer review assignments, and students may upload their
own videos for self-review and/or peer review.
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student knowledge of course content and maps out a personalized
study plan for success. Accessible within Connect, LearnSmart uses
a series of adaptive questions to pinpoint the concepts students do
understandand those they dont. The result is an online tool that
helps students learn faster and study more efficiently, and that enables
instructors to customize classroom lectures and activities to meet
their students needs.
Online Media Library v of student speeches on Connect Lucas:
27 full student speeches (10 new to this edition), including 6 Needs
Improvement versions (3 new to 11e), each accompanied by speech
outlines, and more than 60 video clips (25+new to this edition). The
full student speeches are also available on DVD.
Coverage of persuasion has been improved and expanded. v
Chapter 16, Speaking to Persuade now includes many new
examples and a new student speech with commentary. Chapter
17, Methods of Persuasion has been reorganized, revised, and
expanded to offer more fallacies coverage and a new sample speech
with commentary.
Giving Your First Speech v has been expanded to a full chapter
(Chapter 4). A primary course aim is to assign first speeches as soon
as possible in the semesterlong before most of the principles of
public speaking have been covered in class. This new chapter was
created with this goal in mind to give students more help and support
in getting started.
More on supporting ideas and source citation. v In response
to requests from public-speaking instructors, who name proper
source citation as one of the biggest challenges for public speaking
students, Chapter 8 of this edition includes more coverage in this area,
particularly on citing sources orally (and in the context of preparation
and speaking outlines).
Using Visual Aids (Chapter 13) v has been fully revised to reflect
the quick pace of changes to the existing technology. Among other
changes, the popular PowerPoint appendix has been streamlined
and integrated into the main chapter.
Effective main-text models and examples, updated in every v
chapter. Nearly every page of The Art of Public Speaking has been
revised to present relevant, easy-to-grasp, real-world models that
speak to the newest generation of students: sample student topics,
specific purpose statements, central ideas, and main points; models
of effective introductions and conclusions; student speech outlines;
examples of vivid and concrete language; extracts from speeches
by public figures, professionals, and other real people in real-world
contexts; and a range of clear and effective visual aidsphotos,
models, objects, graphs and charts, PPTs, video.
Clear connection between public speaking principles and v
real-world relevance and applicationfrom classroom to career.
Revised and improved Applying the Power of Public Speaking
activity boxes place students in realistic, professional scenarios that
make use of public speaking, and help them make the leap from
classroom to career.
CONTENTS
Chapter 1: Speaking in Public
Chapter 2: Ethics and Public Speaking
Chapter 3: Listening
Chapter 4: Giving Your First Speech
Chapter 5: Selecting a Topic and a Purpose
Chapter 6: Analyzing the Audience
Chapter 7: Gathering Materials
Chapter 8: Supporting your Ideas
Chapter 9: Organizing the Body of the Speech
Chapter 10: Beginning and Ending the Speech
Chapter 11: Outlining the Speech
Chapter 12: Using Language
Chapter 13: Delivery
Chapter 14: Using Visual Aids
Chapter 15: Speaking to Inform
Chapter 16: Speaking to Persuade
Chapter 17: Methods of Persuasion
Chapter 18: Speaking on Special Occasions
Chapter 19: Speaking in Small Groups
Appendix: Speeches for Analysis and Discussion
Communi c at i on Speec h
2
NEW
*9780077309534*
i SPEAK: PUBLI C SPEAKI NG
FOR CONTEMPORARY LI FE:
2011 EDI TI ON
5t h Edi t i on
Paul E. Nelson, North Dakota State University-Fargo
Scott Titsworth, Ohio University---Athens
Judy C. Pearson, North Dakota State University-Fargo
2012 / 352 pages
ISBN: 9780077309534
Available: January 2011
www.mhhe.com/ispeak2011
McGraw-Hill conducted extensive market research with over 4,000
students to gain insight into their studying and buying behavior.
Students told us they wanted more portable texts with innovative visual
appeal and content that is designed according to the way they learn.
We also surveyed instructors, and they told us they wanted a way to
engage their students without compromising on high quality content.
Freedom of speech and public speaking are critical components of
a healthy democracy. iSpeak promotes this declaration by using
examples that reect vital personal, social, and political themes that
portray campus communities across the country. iSpeak consistently
demonstrates that public communication is directly related to what
people care about, what people want, and what people do. New to
iSpeak is Connect Public Speaking - a dynamic and powerful web-
based learning management platform with the student experience
at its core. Informed by extensive research conducted with both
instructors and students, Connect is designed to help students earn
better grades and save instructors valuable time, whether teaching
a face to face, online, or hybrid course. More current, more portable,
more captivating, plus a rigorous and innovative research foundation
adds up to: more learning. When you meet students where they are,
you can take them where you want them to be.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
Connect Public Speaking v allows students and instructors to
access all course materials including a complete media and research
library, study aids and speech preparation and assessment tools
from a single place.
Connect v PLUS Public Speaking offers all that is available with
Connect Public Speaking with the addition of an integrated, interactive
eBook that offers linked icons that lead to embedded media-rich,
interactive features such as video clips, full speech videos, study
questions, and much more.
New Sampl e Speeches v included in iSpeak 2011 help
demonstrate specific speech techniques and are tied to the books
8 vital themes -- new speech topics include the debate over artificial
sweeteners, puppy mills, poverty in America, organic food, and
much more
Emphasis on 8 vital themes v - Health, Education, Diversity,
Environment, Ethics, Technology, Democracy, and Economics - help
students develop strong speech topics.
New engaging chapter opening vignettes v cover current topics
as diverse as Sarah Palin and the Tea Party, benefits and drawbacks
for social networking/Facebook, speaking at a Senior community
center, climate change, and much more
CONTENTS
Part One: Preparing Your Presentations
Chapter 1: Getting Started
Chapter 2. Preparing Your First Presentation
Chapter 3. Selecting a Topic and Purpose
Chapter 4. Analyzing the Audience
Part Two: Selecting and Arranging Content
Chapter 5. Finding Information and Supporting Your Ideas
Chapter 6. Organizing and Outlining Your Presentation
Chapter 7. Delivering Speeches
Chapter 8. Choosing Your Words
Chapter 9. Visual Resources and Presentation Technology
Part Three: Types of Presentations
Chapter 10. Presenting to Inform
Chapter 11. Presenting Persuasive Messages
Chapter 12. Speaking on Special Occasions
Appendix A: Working and Presenting as a Group
I nt r oduc t i on t o
Communi c at i on
NEW
*9780078036781*
HUMAN COMMUNI CATI ON
Pr i nc i pl es and Cont ex t s, 13t h Edi t i on
Stewart L Tubbs, Eastern Michigan University
2013 / 576 pages
ISBN: 9780078036781
Available: September 2012
[Details unavailable at press time]
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
NEW
*9780078036811*
COMMUNI CATI ON WORKS
11t h Edi t i on
Teri K Gamble, College of New Rochelle
Michael Gamble, New York Institute of Technology
2012 / 544 pages
ISBN: 9780078036811
ISBN: 9780071317528 [IE]
Available: January 2012
www.mhhe.com/gamble11e
[Details unavailable at press time]
Communi c at i on Speec h
3
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
COMMUNI CATI ON MATTERS
Kory Floyd, Arizona State University-Tempe
2011 / 512 pages
ISBN: 9780073385112
ISBN: 9780071221498 [IE]
Available: October 2010
www.mhhe.com/oyd1e
Communication Matters helps students to move beyond an intuitive
appreciation of communication to explore core principles of the
discipline. By helping students to take personal responsibility for
their communication behaviors, by encouraging critical reection,
and by actively applying the key concepts to diverse contemporary
challenges, the program fosters an understanding of the many
important ways communication matters in daily life.
CONTENTS
Part One: Communication in Principle
1. Communication: A First Look
2. Communication and Culture
3. Perceiving the Self and Others
4. How We Use Language
5. Communicating Nonverbally
6. Listening Effectively
Part Two: Communication in Context
7. Communicating in Social and Professional Relationships
8. Communicating in Intimate Relationships
9. Communicating in Small Groups
10. Decision Making and Leadership in Groups
Part Three: Communication in the Public Sphere
11. Choosing, Developing, and Researching a Speech Topic
12. Organizing and Finding Support for Your Speech
13. Presenting a Speech Confidently and Competently
14. Speaking Informatively
15. Speaking Persuasively
Appendix: Workplace Communication and Interviewing
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
HUMAN COMMUNI CATI ON
4t h Edi t i on
Judy Pearson and Paul E Nelson,
North Dakota State University-Fargo
Scott Titsworth and Lynn Harter of Ohio
University-Athens
2011 / 480 pages
ISBN: 9780073406800
ISBN: 9780071080682 [IE]
Available: February 2010
www.mhhe.com/pearson4e
The fourth edition of Human Communication is an engaging reection
of the contemporary eld of communication studies. The authors
writing mantra (Make It Smart; Keep It Real) leads to a text that
strikes a practical balance of definitive content and everyday
application. To make it smart, the authors read hundreds of articles
from mainstream communication journals. To keep it real,the authors
synthesized their ndings so that they resonate with the challenges
and goals of todays typical basic course. Always the goal is to highlight
the relevancy of communication to college students by engaging
the readers. Every chapter features skill-building, critical thinking,
innovative pedagogy, 21st century examples, and lively writing that
is respectful of the student reader.
CONTENTS
Part One: Fundamentals of Communication Studies
1. Introduction to Human Communication
2. Perception, Self and Communication
3. Language and Meaning
4. Nonverbal Communication
5. Listening and Critical Thinking
Part Two: Communication Contexts
6. Interpersonal Communication
7. Intercultural Communication
8. Workplace Communication
9. The Dynamics of Small Group Communication
Part Three: Fundamentals of Public Speaking: Preparation and
Delivery
10. Topic Selection and Audience Analysis
11. Source Credibility and Using Evidence
12. Organizing Your Presentation
13. Delivery and Visual Resources
14. Informative Presentations
15. Persuasive Presentations
Online Unit: Mediated Communication and Media Literacy: This
section is found on the books Online Learning Center Web site at
www.mhhe.com/pearson4e
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
COMMUNI CATI ON WORKS
10t h Edi t i on
Teri K Gamble, College of New Rochelle
Michael Gamble, New York Institute of Technology
2010 / 608 pages
ISBN: 9780073406725
ISBN: 9780071114837 [IE]
Available: October 2009
www.mhhe.com/gamble10e
Written for the introductory communication course, Communication
Works presents communication principles, interpersonal
communication, group communication, and public speaking in an
engaging and highly interactive manner. Its use of questions in the
narrative, margins, boxes, and captions support instructors who prefer
to lead a discussion-oriented and engaging course. Recognizing the
challenges that our world presents for the communication students
of the 21st century, the new edition includes enhanced ESL coverage
and coverage of ethical, cultural, and technological issues, while also
reemphasizing the focus on skill-building to promote the development
of personal and professional relationships in real world and virtual
settings.
CONTENTS
Part One: The Essentials of Communication
1. Communication: The Starting Line
2. Communicating in a Multicultural Society and World
3. Communication and the Self Concept: Who Are You?
4. Communication and Perception: I Am More Than a Camera
5. Language and Meaning: Helping Minds Meet
6. Nonverbal Communication: Silent Language Speaks
7. Listening and Critical Thinking
Part Two: Interpersonal Communication
8. Understanding Relationships
9. Person to Person: Relationships in Context
Part Three: Communicating in the Small Group
10. Groups and Teams: Strategies for Decision Making and Problem
Solving
11. Leading Others and Resolving Conflict
Communi c at i on Speec h
4
Part Four: Communicating in Public
12. The Speaker and the Audience: The Occasion and the Subject
13. Developing Your Speech: Supporting Your Ideas
14. Designing Your Speech: Organizing Your Ideas
15. Delivering Your Speech: Presenting Your Ideas
16. Informative Speaking
17. Persuasive Speaking
Appendix: Person to Person: Interviewing and Developing
Professional Relationships
Online Chapter: Mass Communication and Media Literacy
I nt er per sonal
Communi c at i on
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
NEW
*9780073406756*
I NTERPERSONAL COMMUNI CATI ON
2nd Edi t i on
Kory Floyd, Arizona State University-Tempe
2012 / 480 pages
ISBN: 9780073406756
ISBN: 9780071315135 [IE]
Available: October 2011
www.mhhe.com/oydipc2e
Kory Floyds approach to interpersonal communication stems from
his research on the positive impact of communication on our health
and well-being. Interpersonal Communication 2e demonstrates how
effective interpersonal communication can make students lives better.
With careful consideration given to the impact of computer-mediated
communication, the program reects the rapid changes of the modern
world that todays students live and interact in. The program also
helps students understand and build interpersonal skills and choices
for their academic, personal, and professional lives.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
Di gi t al Lear ni ng Sol ut i ons t hat Assess and Impr ove v
Students Knowledge. McGraw-Hill Connect is a web-based learning
platform that allows students to better connect with their coursework
and their instructors. With its ground-breaking adaptive learning
system, Connect helps students know what they know while guiding
them to experience and learn important concepts they need to master.
Instructors using Connect are reporting improvement of a letter grade
or more in their students performance. In addition, instructors save
time with course preparation and administration because they can
use Connect to easily deliver all content online.
LearnSmart v , McGraw-Hi l l s adapt i ve l earni ng syst em,
assesses student knowledge of course content and maps out a
personalized study plan for success. Accessible within Connect,
LearnSmart uses a series of adaptive questions to pinpoint the
concepts students do understandand those they dont. The result
is an online tool that helps students learn faster and study more
efficiently, and that enables instructors to customize classroom
lectures and activities to meet their students needs.
Groundbreaking Dark Side of IPC coverage expanded to v
a broader Li ght Si de/Dark Si de Lens. The second edition
recognizes that its to students advantage to understand both ends
of the spectrum. Communication: Dark Side/Light Side sections
examine one interpersonal communication issue per chapter that
people commonly experience as either positive or negative. These
examinations give students a foundation for understanding how their
own choices impact how a given interpersonal scenario plays out.
Coverage on Computer-Mediated Communication(CMC)and v
Technology Usage. With integrated examples in every chapter, as
well as coverage of social networking, email, texting, IMing, and more,
Interpersonal Communication explores the implications, opportunities,
and challenges individuals encounter as they rely more and more on
new technologies for interpersonal communication
New organizational enhancements for clarity and ease of v
use. The Emotion chapter has been moved from the end of the text
to follow Chapter 7 Listening.
Get Connect ed sect i ons i n ever y chapt er v focus on
interpersonal issues that arise within CMC-based platformsin
peoples personal lives, in their workplaces, and in online
classrooms.
Got Skills? activities v in every chapter serve as a bridge
between theory and practice, enabling students to apply concepts
to real-world situations.
Skills Self-Assessment. v Assess Your Skills sections in each
chapter of the text and Skills Self-Assessments in Connect ask
students to evaluate their tendencies and competence at a particular
interpersonal skill.
CONTENTS
Chapter One: About Communication
Chapter Two: Culture and Gender
Chapter Three: Communication and the Self
Chapter Four: Interpersonal Perception
Chapter Five: Language
Chapter Six: Nonverbal Communication
Chapter Seven: Listening
Chapter Eight: Emotion
Chapter Nine: Social and Personal Relationships
Chapter Ten: Family and Intimate Relationships
Chapter Eleven: Conflict and Power
Chapter Twelve: Interpersonal Deception
NEW
*9780073534312*
BRI DGES NOT WALLS:
A BOOK ABOUT
I NTERPERSONAL
COMMUNI CATI ON
11t h Edi t i on
John Stewart, University of Dubuque
2012 / 560 pages
ISBN: 9780073534312
Available: June 2011
Since the rst edition in 1973, Bridges Not Walls has examined
the power and promise of interpersonal communication in intimate
relationships, families, communities, and cultures. The text presents
a broad range of scholarly and popular articles drawn from several
disciplines, including communication, psychology, and philosophy,
all chosen for their understandability and practical applicability.
Within these readings are thought-provoking discussions of
interpersonal contact, identity-management, verbal and nonverbal
cues, perception, listening, assertiveness and self-disclosure, family
Communi c at i on Speec h
5
communication, intimacy and social support, defensiveness and
hurtful communication, conict management, culture, and dialogue.
Together, the readings emphasize the social and relational elements
of human communication, the overlapping inuence of verbal and
nonverbal cues, the prominence of culture, and the close connection
between quality of communication and quality of life.
CONTENTS
Part One: Foundations of Interpersonal Communication
Chapter 1 Introduction to the Editor and to This Book
Chapter 2 Communication and Interpersonal Communication
Chapter 3 Communication Building Identities
Chapter 4 Verbal and Nonverbal Contact
Part Two: Making Meaning Together
Chapter 5 Inhaling: Perceiving and Listening
Chapter 6 Exhaling: Expressing and Disclosing
Part Three: Relationships
Chapter 7 Communicating with Family and Friends
Chapter 8 Communicating with Intimate Partners
Part Four: Bridges Not Walls
Chapter 9 Coping with Communication Walls
Chapter 10 Conflict: Turning Walls into Bridges
Chapter 11 Bridging Cultural Differences
I nt er per sonal Con i c t
I NTERPERSONAL CONFLI CT
8t h Edi t i on
William W Wilmot, University of Montana
Joyce L Hocker
2011 / 384 pages
ISBN: 9780073385136
Available: January 2010
www.mhhe.com/wilmot8e
Interpersonal Conict explains the key dynamics of personal conicts
that we all face. Written for courses such as Communication and
Conict, Interpersonal Conict, Conict Management, Conict and
Negotiation, and Conict in Personal Relationships, this textbook
examines the central principles of effective conict management in a
wide variety of contexts--whether at home on the job. Its combination
of up-to-date research and examples gives students a theoretical as
well as a practical foundation in conict management.
CONTENTS
Preface
Acknowledgements
Part One: Conflict Components
Chapter 1: The Nature of Conflict
Chapter 2: Perspectives on Conflict
Chapter 3: Interests and Goals
Chapter 4: Power: The Structure of Conflict
Chapter 5: Styles and Tactics
Part Two: Intervention
Chapter 6: Emotions in Conflict
Chapter 7: Mapping Your Conflicts
Chapter 8: Interpersonal Negotiation
Chapter 9: Third-Party Intervention
Chapter 10: Forgiveness and Reconciliation
Appendix
References
Name Index
Subject Index
Smal l Gr oup
Communi c at i on
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
NEW
*9780073534275*
COMMUNI CATI NG I N
GROUPS
Appl i c at i ons and Sk i l l s,
8t h Edi t i on
Katherine L Adams, California State University-Fresno
Gloria J Galanes, Missouri State University
2012 / 384 pages
ISBN: 9780073534275
ISBN: 9780071314428 [IE]
Available: March 2011
www.mhhe.com/adamsgalanes8e
Communicating in Groups offers a concise, step-by-step introduction
to the theory and practice of small group communication and teaches
students to develop and apply critical thinking skills in group problem-
solving situations. The book continues to synthesize current small
group theory and research while presenting the material in a practical
and accessible manner for students interested in the dynamics of
small group communication. The eighth edition marks the rst time two
central chapters on communication are integrated into one chapter,
capturing key principles of both verbal and non-verbal small group
behavior within a new denition of communication. With the rm belief
that group participation can be an uplifting, energizing experience,
authors Kathy Adams and Gloria Galanes give students the tools they
will need to achieve this outcome. Research and theory are presented
with a focus on what is important to studentsunderstanding their
group experiences and making them effective communicators.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
New Definition and Model of Communication v better captures
the transactional nature of communication.
Communication and Language v included in one chapter, which
synthesizes key information on communication principles, integrating
material from two chapters in previous editions.
Group Use of Technol ogy v is updated, recognizing group
members use of email, texting, the Internet and Facebook to
accomplish work within groups. .
New Material v on language use and production loss, as well as
updated Case Studies, Statistics, and Application boxes.
Updated Online Learning Center Icons v prompt instructors and
students to use the book-specific website where they will find a variety
of resources and activities for teaching and study.
CONTENTS
Part 1: Orientation to Small Group Systems
Chapter 1: Small Groups as the Heart of Society
Chapter 2: Groups as Structured Open Systems
Part 2: Foundations of Small Group Communicating
Chapter 3: Communication Principles for Group Members
Part 3: From Individuals to Group
Chapter 4: Becoming a Group
Communi c at i on Speec h
6
Chapter 5: Working with Diversity in the Small Group
Part 4: Underst andi ng and Improvi ng Group Throughput
Processes
Chapter 6: Creative and Critical Thinking in the Small Group
Chapter 7: Group Problem-Solving Procedures
Chapter 8: Managing Conflicts Productively
Chapter 9: Applying Leadership Principles
Part 5: Small Group Public Presentations
Chapter 10: Planning, Organizing and Presenting Small Group Oral
Presentations
Appendix: Techniques for Observing Small Groups
NEW
*9780073534329*
A SYSTEMS APPROACH TO SMALL GROUP
I NTERACTI ON
11t h Edi t i on
Stewart L Tubbs, Eastern Michigan University
2012 / 512 pages
ISBN: 9780073534329
Available: November 2011
www. mhhe.com/tubbs11e
The only book that integrates all important small group communication
topics into a single comprehensive conceptual model, this text
pioneered the systems approach for the group communication course.
Each chapter begins with a brief preview, followed by a glossary of
terms and a real life case study. The text material in each chapter is
followed by several experiential exercises for skill development and
two original readings.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
New Case Exercises and Studies v that will engage students
include:
(Chapter 1) Comparing individual decision-making to group v
decisions by ranking the National Football League teams.
(Chapter 2 ) Showing how computers reveal personal v
information about users.
(Chapter 4) Exploring the relationship of Hooters hiring v
policy to weight.
New Practical Tips Boxes v designed to help readers see the
practical applications of the text material cover:
How group meetings meet basic human needs v
Assertive communication skills v
Verbal cues for success v
Team leadership v
Dealing with college conformity pressure v
Hybrid brainstorming techniques v
Managing conflict v
Getting buy-in for managing changes v
Systemati c Pedagogy v includes practical tips boxes, case
studies, exercises, summaries, chapter beginning glossaries, tables,
illustrations, bibliographies, selected readings.
CONTENTS
Chapter 1 What Is Small Group Interaction?
Chapter 2 Communication Processes
Chapter 3 Relevant Background Factors
Chapter 4 Group Circumstances and Structure
Chapter 5 Leadership and Social Influence Processes
Chapter 6 Decision-Making Processes
Chapter 7 Conflict Management
Chapter 8 Consequences
Vi sual Communi c at i on
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
NEW
*9780073512020*
SEEI NG I S BELI EVI NG
4t h Edi t i on
Arthur Berger, San Francisco State University
2012 / 288 pages
ISBN: 9780073512020
ISBN: 9780071086080 [IE]
Available: January 2011
Seeing is Believing: An Introduction to Visual Communication uses
semiotic theory, psychoanalytic theory and other theories to deal with
various aspects of visual communication in an accessible, interesting
and entertaining book. It has many new images that reect the topics
discussed in the book and a number of discussion of relevant topics
such as postmodernism, tattoos, facial expression, neuromarketing,
advertising and persuasion, cultural codes, typographic theory,
photograph and landscape, photography and narcissism, digital
photography and oil painting, dreams and a rewritten chapter on
computers that deals with videogames and social media among other
things. The author has also included a number of new drawings he
made.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
New or enhanced material v includes:
Chapter 1: Visual culture, tattoos, Aristotles theory of imitation, v
and Baudrillard on advertising.
Chapter 2: Facial expression and culture codes. v
Chapter 3: Geometrical illusions and typographic theory. v
Chapter 4: McLuhan on print. v
Chapter 5: Iconic buildings; images and advertising; photography v
and narcissism; photography and oil painting; the power of
landscape.
Chapter 6: Eisenstein on montage, postmodernism, and Freud v
on dreams.
CONTENTS
Introduction: Image and Imagination
Chapter 1: Seeing Is Believing
Chapter 2: How We See
Chapter 3: Elements of Visual Communication
Chapter 4: Typography and Graphic Design: Tools of Visual
Communication
Chapter 5: Photography: The Captured Moment
Communi c at i on Speec h
7
Chapter 6: Film: The Moving Image
Chapter 7: Television: The Ever-Changing Mosaic
Chapter 8: Comics, Cartoons, and Animation: The Development of
An Art Form
Chapter 9: Computers and Graphics: Wonders from the Image-
Maker
Glossary
Selected Annotated Bibiliography
References
Illustration Credits
Names Index
Subjects Index
Busi ness Communi c at i on
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
COMMUNI CATI NG AT WORK PRI NCI PLES
AND PRACTI CES FOR BUSI NESS AND THE
PROFESSI ONS
10t h Edi t i on
Ronald B Adler, Santa Barbara City College
Jeanne Marquardt Elmhorst, Central New Mexico Community College
2010 / 608 pages
ISBN: 9780073385174
ISBN: 9780071312554 [IE]
Available: October 2009
www.mhhe.com/adler10e
As the leading text in its eld, Communicating at Work takes a
pragmatic approach that applies scholarly principles to real world
business situations. Strong multicultural focus, emphasis on working
in teams, and thorough coverage of presentational speaking continue
to be hallmark features. The tenth edition features a more streamlined
organization, new Technology Tip boxes, new Case Study sidebars,
updated coverage of intercultural communication, new communication
networks, and more.
CONTENTS
Part One:
1. Communicating at Work
2. Communication, Culture, and Work
Part Two:
3. Listening
4. Verbal and Nonverbal Messages
5. Interpersonal Skills
Part Three:
6. Principles of Interviewing
7. Types of Interviews
Part Four:
8. Working in Teams
9. Effective Meetings
Part Five:
10. Developing and Organizing the Presentation
11. Verbal and Visual Support in Presentations
12. Delivering the Presentation
13. Types of Business Presentations
Appendix I: Sample Presentations
Appendix II: Business Writing
I nt er vi ew i ng
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
I NTERVI EWI NG: PRI NCI PLES AND
PRACTI CES
13t h Edi t i on
Charles J Stewart, Purdue University-West Lafayette
William B Cash
2011 / 448 pages
ISBN: 9780073406817
ISBN: 9780071289610 [IE]
Available: October 2010
www.mhhe.com/stewart13e
Interviewing: Principles and Practices, the most widely used text for
the interviewing course, continues to reect the growing sophistication
with which interviewing is being approached, incorporating the ever-
expanding body of research in all types of interview settings, recent
communication theory, and the importance of equal opportunity laws
on interviewing practices. It provides the most thorough treatment
of the basics of interviewing, including the complex interpersonal
communication process, types and uses of questions, and the
structuring of interviews from opening to closing.
CONTENTS
1. An Introduction to Interviewing
2. An Interpersonal Communication Process
3. Questions and Their Uses
4. Structuring the Interview
5. The Informational Interview
6. The Survey Interview
7. The Recruiting Interview
8. The Employment Interview
9. The Performance Interview
10. The Persuasive Interview: The Persuader
11. The Persuasive Interview: The Persuadee
12. The Counseling Interview
13. The Health Care Interview
Glossary
Author Index
Subject Index
REVIEW COPY
(Available for course adoption only)
To request for a review copy,
contact your local McGraw-Hill
representatives or,
fax the Review Copy Request Form found
in this catalog or,
e-mail your request to
mghasia_sg@mcgraw-hill.com or,
submit online at www.mheducation.asia
Communi c at i on Speec h
8
Communi c at i on Theor y
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
NEW
*9780073534305*
A FI RST LOOK AT
COMMUNI CATI ON THEORY
8t h Edi t i on
Em Grifn, Wheaton College
2012 / 608 pages
ISBN: 9780073534305
ISBN: 9780071086424 [IE]
Available: March 2011
www. mhhe.com/grifn8e
The most widely-used textbook for the communication theory
course, A First Look at Communication Theory analyzes the major
communication theories at a level that is appropriate for both lower-
and upper-level courses. The theories represented in the text reect
a mix of foundational and recent scholarship and strike a balance of
scientic and interpretive approaches.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
Three additional theories added v including the Communication
Privacy Management Theory (Petronio), Symbolic Convergence
Theory (Bormann), and Uses and Gratifications (Katz) to provide
even greater coverage of communication theories
Application logs v allow students to share stories telling how they
apply each theory to their own lives. These will not only spark interest
but also reinforce the specific feature of the theory being described.
Most chapters were updated v with either current research, a
shift in theorists thinking, new examples, or a reorganization of the
chapter - see the chapter on the cultivation theory and the social
judgment theory
CONTENTS
Preface for Instructors
Division One: Overview
Chapter 1: Launching Your Study of Communication Theory
Chapter 2: Talk About Theory
Chapter 3: Weighing the Words
Chapter 4: Mapping the Territory (Seven Traditions in the Field of
Communication Theory)
Division Two: Interpersonal Communication
Interpersonal Messages
Chapter 5: Symbolic Interactionism of George Herbert Mead
Chapter 6 : Coordinated Management of Meaning (CMM) of W.
Barnett Pearce & Vernon Cronen
Chapter 7: Expectancy Violations Theory of J udee Burgoon
Chapter 8 : Constructivism of J esse Delia
Relationship Development
Chapter 9: Social Penetration Theory of Irwin Altman & Dalmas
Taylor
Chapter 10: Uncertainty Reduction Theory of Charles Berger
Chapter 11: Social Information Processing Theory of J oseph
Walther
Relationship Maintenance
Chapter 12: Relational Dialectics of Leslie Baxter & Barbara
Montgomery
Chapter 13: Communication Privacy Management Theory of Sandra
Petronio
Chapter 14: The Interactional View of Paul Watzlawick
Influence
Chapter 15: Social J udgment Theory of Muzafer Sherif
Chapter 16: Elaboration Likelihood Model of Richard Petty & J ohn
Cacioppo
Chapter 17: Cognitive Dissonance Theory of Leon Festinger
Division Three: Group and Public Communication
Group Communication
Chapter 18: Functional Perspective on Group Decision Making of
Randy Hirokawa & Dennis Gouran
Chapter 19: Symbolic Convergence Theory of Ernest Bormann
Organizational Communication
Chapter 20: Cultural Approach to Organizations of Clifford Geertz &
Michael Pacanowsky
Chapter 21: Critical Theory of Communication in Organizations of
Stanly Deetz
Public Rhetoric
Chapter 22: The Rhetoric of Aristotle
Chapter 23: Dramatism of Kenneth Burke
Chapter 24: Narrative Paradigm of Walter Fisher
Division Four: Mass Communication
Media and Culture
Chapter 25: Media Ecology of Marshall McLuhan
Chapter 26: Semiotics of Roland Barthes
Chapter 27: Cultural Studies of Stuart Hall
Media Effects
Chapter 28: Uses and Gratifications of Elihu Katz
Chapter 29: Cultivation Theory of George Gerbner
Chapter 30: Agenda-Setting Theory of Maxwell McCombs & Donald
Shaw
Division Five: Cultural Context
Intercultural Communication
Chapter 31: Communication Accommodation Theory of Howard
Giles
Chapter 32: Face-Negotiation Theory of Stella Ting Toomey
Chapter 33: Speech Codes Theory of Gerry Philipsen
Gender and Communication
Chapter 34: Genderlect Styles of Deborah Tannen
Chapter 35: Standpoint Theory of Sandra Harding & J ulia Wood
Chapter 36: Muted Group Theory of Cheris Kramarae
Division Six: Integration
Chapter 37: Common Threads in Comm Theories
Appendix A: Abstracts of Theories
Appendix B: Feature Films that Illustrate Communication Theories
Appendix C: NCA Credo for Ethical Communication
Endnotes
Credits and Acknowledgements
Index
McGrow-H||| |s |nterested to rev|ew your
textbook proposo|s |or pub||cot|on.
F|eose contoct your |oco| McGrow-H||| o|0ce or
emo|| to os|opubmcgrow-h|||.com.
V|s|t McGrow-H||| Educot|on [As|o}
Webs|te: http:JJwww.mheducot|on.os|oJpub||shJ
Inv|tot|on to Fub||sh
Communi c at i on Speec h
9
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
I NTRODUCI NG COMMUNI CATI ON THEORY:
ANALYSI S AND APPLI CATI ON
4t h Edi t i on
Richard L West, Emerson College and Lynn H Turner,
Marquette University
2010 / Softcover / 608 pages
ISBN: 9780073385075
ISBN: 9780071276344 [IE]
Available: February 2009
www.mhhe.com/west4e
This text introduces the eld of communication to students who
may have little or no background in communication theory. Its three
overriding goals are to help students understand the pervasiveness
of theory in their lives, to demystify the theoretical process, and to
help students become more systematic and critical in their thinking
about theory.
CONTENTS
Preface
Part One. Setting the Stage
Chapter 1. Thinking about Communication: Definitions, Models, and
Ethics
Chapter 2. Thinking about the Field: Traditions and Contexts
Chapter 3. Thinking About Theory and Research
Chapter 4. Before We Begin...
Part Two. Understanding the Dialogue
THE SELF AND MESSAGES
Chapter 5. Symbolic Interaction Theory
Chapter 6. Coordinated Management of Meaning
Chapter 7. Cognitive Dissonance Theory
Chapter 8. Expectancy Violations Theory
RELATIONSHIP DEVELOPMENT
Chapter 9. Uncertainty Reduction Theory
Chapter 10. Social Penetration Theory
Chapter 11. Social Exchange Theory
Chapter 12. Relational Dialectics Theory
Chapter 13. Communication Privacy Management Theory
GROUPS AND ORGANIZATIONS
Chapter 14. Groupthink
Chapter 15. Structuration Theory
Chapter 16. Organizational Culture Theory
Chapter 17. Organizational Information Theory
THE PUBLIC
Chapter 18. The Rhetoric
Chapter 19. Dramatism
Chapter 20. The Narrative Paradigm
THE MEDIA
Chapter 21. Cultural Studies
Chapter 22. Cultivation Analysis
Chapter 23. Uses and Gratifications Theory
Chapter 24. Spiral of Silence Theory
Chapter 25. Media Ecology Theory
CULTURE AND DIVERSITY
Chapter 26. Face-Negotiation Theory
Chapter 27. Communication Accommodation Theory
Chapter 28. Muted Group Theory
Chapter 29. Standpoint Theory
Part Three: On the Horizon...
Chapter 30. Moving in New Directions
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
COMMUNI CATI ON THEORI ES:
PERSPECTI VES, PROCESSES AND
CONTEXTS
2nd Edi t i on
Katherine Miller, Texas A&M University College Station
2005 / 352 pages / Hardcover
ISBN: 9780071238359 [IE]
www.mhhe.com/miller2
CONTENTS
Part I. Perspectives On Communication Theory
1. Conceptual Foundations: What Is Communication?
2. Philosophical Foundations: What Is Theory?
3. Post-Positivist Approaches on Theory Development
4. Interpretive Approaches on Theory Development
5. Critical Approaches on Theory Development
Part II. Theories Of Communication Processes
6. Theories of Symbolic Organization
7. Theories of Message Production
8. Theories of Message Processing
9. Theories of Discourse and Interaction
10. Theories of Communication in Developing Relationships
11. Theories of Communication in Developed Relationships
Part III. Theories Of Communication Contexts
12. Theories of Organizational Communication
13. Theories of Small Group Communication
14. Theories of Media Processing and Effects
15. Theories of Media and Society
16. Theories of Culture and Communication
Resear c h Met hods
COMMUNI CATI ON RESEARCH ASKI NG
QUESTI ONS, FI NDI NG ANSWERS
3r d Edi t i on
Joann Keyton, North Carolina State University-Raleigh
2011 / 432 pages
ISBN: 9780073406763
Available: March 2010
www.mhhe.com/keyton3e
Communication Research: Asking Questions, Finding Answers
covers basic research issues and both quantitative and qualitative
approaches to communication research. The text helps students
become better consumers of communication research literature by
emphasizing effective methods for nding, consuming, and analyzing
communication research. Covering the entire research process--how
one conceptualizes a research idea, turns it into an interesting and
researchable question, selects a methodology, conducts the study,
and writes up the studys ndings--provides a path for students who
wish to develop and conduct research projects.
CONTENTS
Part I. Research Basics
1. Introduction to Research in Communication
2. The Research Process--Getting Started
3. Introduction to Quantitative Research
4. Introduction to Qualitative Research
5. Research Ethics
Communi c at i on Speec h
10
Part II. Quantitative Communication Research
6. Measurement
7. Sampling, Significance Levels, and Hypothesis Testing
8. Quantitative Research Designs
9. Surveys and Questionnaires
10. Descriptive Statistics
11. Testing for Differences
12. Testing for Relationships
13. Quantitative Analysis of Texts
Part III. Qualitative Communication Research
14. Designing Qualitative Research
15. Qualitative Methods of Data Collection
16. Analyzing Qualitative Data
Part IV. Reading And Writing Research Reports
17. Reading and Writing the Quantitative Research Report
18. Reading and Writing the Qualitative Research Report
Appendix A: Personal Report of Communication Apprehension
Appendix B: Formulas and Steps for Statistical Calculation
Appendix C: Random Numbers Table
Appendix D: Sample Protocol for Experimental Study
Glossary
Index
At the end of each chapter:
Summary
Key Terms
Gender Communi c at i on
TAKI NG SI DES: CLASHI NG VI EWS I N
GENDER
5t h Edi t i on
Jacquelyn W White, University of NC-Greensboro
2011 / 432 pages
ISBN: 9780078049941
Available: March 2010
www.mhhe.com/takingsides
Taking Sides volumes present current controversial issues in a
debate-style format designed to stimulate student interest and develop
critical thinking skills. Each issue is thoughtfully framed with an
issue summary, an issue introduction, and a postscript or challenge
questions. Taking Sides readers feature an annotated listing of
selected World Wide Web sites. An online Instructors Resource Guide
with testing material is available for each volume. Using Taking Sides
in the Classroom is also an excellent instructor resource. Visit www.
mhhe.com/takingsides for more details.
CONTENTS
Unit 1 Definitions and Cultural Boundaries: A Moving Target
Issue 1. Is Anatomy Destiny?
Issue 2. Is Sexual Orientation Innate?
Issue 3. Do Sex Differences in Careers in Mathematics and
Sciences Have a Biological Basis?
Unit 2 Different Strokes: The Question of Difference
Issue 4. Are Women and Men More Similar Than Different?
Issue 5. Is Culture the Primary Source of Sex Differences in
Communication Styles?
Issue 6. Do Nice Guys Finish Last?
Unit 3 Violence in the Daily Lives of Women and Men
Issue 7. Gender Symmetry: Do Women and Men Commit Equal
Levels of Violence Against Intimate Partners?
Issue 8. Does Pornography Reduce the Incidence of Rape?
Issue 9. Is Cyberbullying Related to Gender?
Unit 4 From Ozzie and Harriet to My Two Dads: Gender in
Childhood
Issue 10. Should Same-Sex Marriage Be Legal?
Issue 11. Can Lesbian and Gay Couples Be Appropriate Parents
for Children?
Issue 12. Are Fathers Necessary for Childrens Well-Being?
Issue 13. Should Parents Be Allowed to Choose the Sex of Their
Children?
Unit 5 From 9 to 5: Gender in the World of Work
Issue 14. Does the Mommy Track (Part-Time Work) Improve
Womens Lives?
Issue 15. Can Social Policies Improve Gender Inequalities in the
Workplace?
Issue 16. Is the Gender Wage Gap J ustified?
Issue 17. Are Barriers to Womens Success as Leaders Due to
Societal Obstacles?
Unit 6 Gender and Sexuality: Double Standards, Triple
Standards?
Issue 18. Should Abstinence-Until-Marriage Be the Only Message
for Teens?
Issue 19. Is Gender Identity Disorder an Appropriate Psychiatric
Diagnosis?
Issue 20. Should Transgendered Women Be Considered Real
Women?
I nt er c ul t ur al
Communi c at i on
EXPERI ENCI NG I NTERCULTURAL
COMMUNI CATI ON
An I nt r oduc t i on, 4t h Edi t i on
Judith N Martin, Arizona State University-Tempe
Thomas K Nakayama, Northeastern University
2011 / 432 pages
ISBN: 9780073406794
Available: January 2010
www.mhhe.com/experiencing4e
This introductory level textbook offers students a framework to
begin building their intercultural communication skills. Experiencing
Intercultural Communication: An Introduction provides a number of
pedagogical aids to help students achieve uency in these skills,
including chapter outlines, chapter objectives, suggested websites
and other resources for further learning, key terms, activities in each
chapters, bulleted chapter summaries, and more. As an introductory
text, the material is accessible and encourages students to seek
out more information. By giving the students a framework to begin
understanding the complexities of intercultural interaction, students
begin the process of learning about both other cultures and their
relationships with their own culture.
CONTENTS
Preface
Part I: Foundations of Intercultural Communication
Chapter 1: Studying Intercultural Communication
Chapter 2: Intercultural Communication: Building Blocks and
Barriers
Chapter 3: History and Intercultural Communication
Chapter 4: Identity and Intercultural Communication
Part II: Intercultural Communication Processes
Chapter 5: Verbal Issues in Intercultural Communication
Chapter 6: Nonverbal Communication Issues
Mass Communi c at i on
11
Communi c at i on Speec h
Part III: Intercultural Communication in Everyday Life
Chapter 7: Popular Culture and Intercultural Communication
Chapter 8: Culture, Communication, and Conflict
Chapter 9: Intercultural Relationships in Everyday Life
Part IV: Intercultural Communication in Applied Settings
Chapter 10: Intercultural Communication in Tourism Contexts
Chapter 11: Intercultural Communication and Business
Chapter 12: Intercultural Communication and Education
Chapter 13: Intercultural Communication and Health Care
Glossary
Credits
Index
I nt r oduc t i on t o
Mass Communi c at i on
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
NEW
*9780073526195*
DYNAMI CS OF MASS COMMUNI CATI ON:
MEDI A I N TRANSI TI ON
12t h Edi t i on
Joseph R Dominick, University of Georgia
2013 / 512 pages
ISBN: 9780073526195
ISBN: 9780071318266 [IE]
Available: March 2012
[Details unavailable at press time]
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
NEW
*9780073526157*
I NTRODUCTI ON TO
MASS COMMUNI CATI ON
Medi a Li t er ac y and Cul t ur e,
7t h Edi t i on
By Stanley Baran, Bryant University
2012 (January 2011) / 512 pages
ISBN: 9780073526157
ISBN: 9780071317153 [IE]
www.mhhe.com/baran7e
This text encourages students to be active media consumers and
gives them a deeper understanding of the role that the media play in
both shaping and reecting culture. Through this cultural perspective,
students learn that audience members are as much a part of the mass
communication process as are the media producers, technologies,
and industries. This was the rst, and remains the only, university-
level text to make media literacy central to its approach, and given
recent national and global turmoil, its emphasis on media use and
democracy could not be more timely.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
Updated v Cultural Forum highlights media-related cultural issues
that are currently debated in the mass media to help students develop
their critical thinking skills.
Updated v Living Media Literacy are brief, chapter-ending essays
that suggest ways in which students can put what they have learned
into practice. They are calls to action- personal, social, educational,
political. Their goal is to make media literacy a living enterprise,
something that has value in how students interact with the culture
and media
REVIEW COPY
(Available for course adoption only)
To request for a review copy,
contact your local McGraw-Hill
representatives or,
fax the Review Copy Request Form found
in this catalog or,
e-mail your request to
mghasia_sg@mcgraw-hill.com or,
submit online at www.mheducation.asia
Mass Communi c at i on
12
Updated v Media History Repeats demonstrate how cultural and
social debates surrounding the different media tend to be repeated
throughout history, regardless of the technology or era in question.
Questions for Critical Thinking and Discussion v encourage
students to investigate their own cultural assumptions and media use
and to engage one another in debate on critical issues.
Updates were made to enhance several chapters v in the
new edition - discussion of new reading devices including the
iPad, discussion of whether we should focus on saving journalism,
discussion of the use of the Internet, cell phones, and Twitter on Irans
Green Revolution, and much more!
Correlation Guide: v www.mhhe.com/mhcp/CorrelationGuides/
TS_Mass_Media_11eX.pdf
This convenient guide matches the issues in v Taking Sides:
Clashing Views in Mass Media and Society, 11/e Expanded with
the corresponding chapters in three of our best-selling McGraw-Hill
Mass Media textbooks by Dominick, Baran, and Rodman.
CONTENTS
Part One: Laying the Groundwork
1. Mass Communication, Culture, and Media Literacy
2. Convergence and the Reshaping of Mass Communication
Part Two: Media, Media Industries, and Media Audiences
3. Books
4. Newspapers
5. Magazines
6. Film
7. Radio, Recording, and Popular Music
8. Television, Cable, and Mobile Video
9. Video Games
10. The Internet and the World Wide Web
Part Three: Supporting Industries
11. Public Relations
12. Advertising
Part Four: Mass-Mediated Culture in the Information Age
13. Theories and Effects of Mass Communication
14. Media Freedom, Regulation, and Ethics
15. Global Media
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
NEW
*9780073512013*
MASS MEDI A I N A
CHANGI NG WORLD
4t h Edi t i on
George Rodman, Brooklyn College
2012 / 528 pages
ISBN: 9780073512013
ISBN: 9780071316323 [IE]
Available: February 2011
www.mhhe.com/rodman4e
Mass Media in a Changing World introduces students to the world
of media through a unique structure that makes the material easily
intelligible and meaningful to their lives. Each chapter is divided into
three-part narrative sections: history, industry, and controversy. Mass
Media in a Changing World is the story of where the media came from,
why they do what they do, and why those actions cause controversies.
The new fourth edition features coverage of new media and the
signicance of mobile media in mass communication including new
sections on the convergence of economics of the online and mobile
industries and the history of mobile media.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
New analysis of the significance of v new medi a in movie
promotion and advisory ratings as well as the convergence of new
and traditional media - chapter 6 opener on the significance of the
3-D version of Avatar and the iPad video game Pride and Prejudice
and Zombies.
New v Close-Up boxes on history, industry, and controversy were
added to reinforce the three-part structure for every chapter and
present interesting examples or trends that illustrate key concepts.
New coverage of the significance of v mobile media including new
sections on the convergence of economics of the online and mobile
industries and the history of mobile media, including an explanation of
Cell Technology and an analysis of the significance of cell phones
Chapter-opening vignettes introduce a central theme for each v
chapter and encourage critical thinking.
A complete Timeline, located in the Appendix, comprises all of v
the historical events discussed enabling students to review history
by chapter, subject, time frame, or media type.
Correlation Guide: v www.mhhe.com/mhcp/CorrelationGuides/
AE_Mass_Media_1112.pdf
This convenient guide matches the units in v Annual Editions:
Mass Medi a 11/12 with the corresponding chapters in three of
our best-selling McGraw-Hill Mass Communication textbooks by
Dominick, Rodman, and Baran.
Correlation Guide: v www.mhhe.com/mhcp/CorrelationGuides/
TS_Mass_Media_11eX.pdf
This convenient guide matches the issues in v Taking Sides:
Clashing Views in Mass Media and Society, 11/e Expanded with
the corresponding chapters in three of our best-selling McGraw-Hill
Mass Media textbooks by Dominick, Baran, and Rodman.
McGrow-H||| |s |nterested to rev|ew your
textbook proposo|s |or pub||cot|on.
F|eose contoct your |oco| McGrow-H||| o|0ce or
emo|| to os|opubmcgrow-h|||.com.
V|s|t McGrow-H||| Educot|on [As|o}
Webs|te: http:JJwww.mheducot|on.os|oJpub||shJ
Inv|tot|on to Fub||sh
Mass Communi c at i on
13
CONTENTS
Part 1: Overview
Chapter 1: Introduction: Media in a Changing World
Chapter 2: Media Impact: Mass Communication Research and
Effects
Part 2: The Print Industries
Chapter 3: Books: The Durable Medium
Chapter 4: Newspapers: Where J ournalism Begins
Chapter 5: Magazines: The First of the Specialized Media
Part 3: The Electronic Industries
Chapter 6: Movies: Magic from the Dream Factory
Chapter 7: Recordings and the Music Industry: Copyright Battles,
Format Wars
Chapter 8: Radio: The Hits Keep Coming
Chapter 9: Television: Reflecting and Affecting Society
Chapter 10: The Internet: Convergence in a Networked World
Part 4: Information And Persuasion Industries
Chapter 11: Electronic J ournalism: News in the Age of
Entertainment
Chapter 12: Public Relations: The Image Industry
Chapter 13: Advertising: The Media Support Industry
Part 5: Media Law And Ethics
Chapter 14: Media Law: Understanding Freedom of Expression
Chapter 15: Media Ethics: Understanding Media Morality
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
DYNAMI CS OF MASS COMMUNI CATI ON
Medi a i n Tr ansi t i on, 11t h Edi t i on
Joseph R Dominick, University of Georgia
2011 / 512 pages
ISBN: 9780073378886
ISBN: 9780071221467 [IE]
Available: February 2010
www.mhhe.com/dominick11e
Well-known for its balanced approach to media industries and
professions, Dynamics of Mass Communication offers a lively,
thorough, and objective introduction for mass communication majors
and non-majors alike. Dynamics of Mass Communication takes a
comprehensive and balanced look at the changing world of mass
media. The new edition explores how the traditional mass media are
dealing with shrinking audiences, evaporating advertising revenue
and increased competition from the Internet. The 11th edition brings
students up-to-date on the latest developments in the media world
including Facebook, Twitter and other social media; new media
business models; e-book readers; online video sites such as YouTube
and hulu.com.; the decoupling of advertising from media content,
and many more.
CONTENTS
Part I The Nature and History of Mass Communication
Chapter 1 Communication: Mass and Other Forms
Chapter 2 Perspectives on Mass Communication
Chapter 3 Historical and Cultural Context
Part II Media
Chapter 4 Newspapers
Chapter 5 Magazines
Chapter 6 Books
Chapter 7 Radio
Chapter 8 Sound Recording
Chapter 9 Motion Pictures
Chapter 10 Broadcast Television
Chapter 11 Cable, Satellite and Internet Television
Chapter 12 The Internet and the World Wide Web
Part III Specific Media Professions
Chapter 13 News Gathering and Reporting
Chapter 14 Public Relations Chapter 15 Advertising
Part IV Regulation of the Mass Media
Chapter 16 Formal Controls: Laws, Rules, Regulations.
Chapter 17 Ethics and Other Informal Controls
Part V Impact of the Media
Chapter 18 International and Comparative Media Systems
Chapter 19 Social Effects of Mass Communication
Glossary
Photo Credits
Index
I nt r oduc t i on t o Mass
Communi c at i on
Reader s
NEW
*9780078050411*
TAKI NG SI DES: CLASHI NG VI EWS I N MASS
MEDI A AND SOCI ETY
12t h Edi t i on
Alison Alexander, University of Georgia
Jarice Hanson, University of Mass-Amherst
2013 / 416 pages
ISBN: 9780078050411
Available: March 2012
www.mhhe.com/takingsides
Taking Sides volumes present current controversial issues in a
debate-style format designed to stimulate student interest and
develop critical thinking skills. Each issue is thoughtfully framed
with an issue summary, an issue introduction, and a postscript or
challenge questions. Taking Sides readers feature an annotated listing
of selected World Wide Web sites. An online Instructors Resource
Guide with testing material is available for each volume. Using Taking
Sides in the Classroom is also an excellent instructor resource. Visit
www.mhhe.com/takingsides for more details.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
Enhanced Pedagogy! v New to this edition: Topic Guide;
Expanded Introduction; Learning Outcomes; plus a new section
titled Exploring the Issue featuring Critical Thinking and Reflection
questions, Is There Common Ground?, and Additional Resources.
REVIEW COPY
(Available for course adoption only)
To request for a review copy,
contact your local McGraw-Hill
representatives or,
fax the Review Copy Request Form found
in this catalog or,
e-mail your request to
mghasia_sg@mcgraw-hill.com or,
submit online at www.mheducation.asia
Mass Communi c at i on
14
NEW
*9780078051241*
ANNUAL EDI TI ONS: MASS MEDI A 12/13
18t h Edi t i on
Joan Gorham, West Virginia University-Morgantown
2013 / 224 pages
ISBN: 9780078051241
Available: March 2012
www.mhhe.com/annualeditions
The Annual Edi ti ons series is designed to provide convenient,
inexpensive access to a wide range of current articles from some of the
most respected magazines, newspapers, and journals published today.
Annual Editions are updated on a regular basis through a continuous
monitoring of over 300 periodical sources. The articles selected are
authored by prominent scholars, researchers, and commentators
writing for a general audience. The Annual Editions volumes have
a number of common organizational features designed to make
them particularly useful in the classroom: a general introduction; an
annotated table of contents; a topic guide; an annotated listing of
selected World Wide Web sites; and a brief overview for each section.
Each volume also offers an online Instructors Resource Guide with
testing materials. Using Annual Editions in the Classroom is a general
guide that provides a number of interesting and functional ideas for
using Annual Editions readers in the classroom. Visit www.mhhe.
com/annualeditions for more details.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
Enhanced Pedagogy! v Learning Outcomes at the beginning of
each unit. Critical Thinking questions at the end of each article.
NEW
*9780078050152*
TAKI NG SI DES:
CLASHI NG VI EWS I N MASS
MEDI A AND SOCI ETY
Ex panded, 11t h Edi t i on
Alison Alexander, University of Georgia
Jarice Hanson, University of Mass-Amherst
2012 / 448 pages
ISBN: 9780078050152
Available: July 2011
www.mhhe.com/takingsides
Taking Sides volumes present current controversial issues in a
debate-style format designed to stimulate student interest and develop
critical thinking skills. Each issue is thoughtfully framed with an
issue summary, an issue introduction, and a postscript or challenge
questions. Taking Sides readers feature an annotated listing of
selected World Wide Web sites. An online Instructors Resource Guide
with testing material is available for each volume. Using Taking Sides
in the Classroom is also an excellent instructor resource. Visit www.
mhhe.com/takingsides for more details.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
Correlation Guide: v www.mhhe.com/mhcp/CorrelationGuides/
TS_Mass_Media_11eX.pdf
This convenient guide matches the issues in v Taking Sides:
Clashing Views in Mass Media and Society, 11/e Expanded with
the corresponding chapters in three of our best-selling McGraw-Hill
Mass Media textbooks by Dominick, Baran, and Rodman.
CONTENTS
Unit 1 Media and Social Issues
Issue 1. Are American Values Shaped by the Mass Media?
Issue 2. Are Harry Potter Books Harmful for Children?
Issue 3. Do Media Represent Realistic Images of Arabs?
Issue 4. Do Media Cause Individuals to Develop Negative Body Images?
Unit 2 A Question of Content
Issue 5. Do Video Games Encourage Violent Behavior?
Issue 6. Do Copyright Laws Protect Ownership of Intellectual
Property?
Issue 7. Is Advertising Good for Society?
Unit 3 News and Politics
Issue 8. Can Media Regain Public Trust?
Issue 9. Does Fake News Mislead the Public?
Issue 10. Will Evolving Forms of J ournalism Be an Improvement?
Unit 4 Law and Policy
Issue 11. Should the Public Support Freedom of the Press?
Issue 12. Is Hate Speech in the Media Directly Affecting Our
Culture?
Issue 13. Has Industry Regulation Controlled Indecent Media
Content?
Unit 5 Media Business
Issue 14. Can the Independent Musical Artist Thrive in Todays Music
Business?
Issue 15. Should Newspapers Shut Down Their Presses?
Issue 16. Do New Business Models Result in Greater Consumer
Choice of Products and Ideas?
Unit 6 Life in the Digital Age
Issue 17. Are Online Services Responsible for an Increase in Bullying
and Harassment?
Issue 18. Are People Better Informed in the Information Society?
Issue 19. Are Youth Indifferent to News and Politics?
NEW
*9780078050909*
ANNUAL EDI TI ONS:
MASS MEDI A 11/12
17t h Edi t i on
Joan Gorham, West Virginia University-
Morgantown
2012 / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780078050909
Available: February 2011
www.mhhe.com/annualeditions
The Annual Edi ti ons series is designed to provide convenient,
inexpensive access to a wide range of current articles from some of the
most respected magazines, newspapers, and journals published today.
Annual Editions are updated on a regular basis through a continuous
monitoring of over 300 periodical sources. The articles selected are
authored by prominent scholars, researchers, and commentators
writing for a general audience. The Annual Editions volumes have
a number of common organizational features designed to make
them particularly useful in the classroom: a general introduction; an
annotated table of contents; a topic guide; an annotated listing of
selected World Wide Web sites; and a brief overview for each section.
Each volume also offers an online Instructors Resource Guide with
Mass Communi c at i on
15
testing materials. Using Annual Editions in the Classroom is a general
guide that provides a number of interesting and functional ideas for
using Annual Editions readers in the classroom. Visit www.mhhe.
com/annualeditions for more details.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
Enhanced Pedagogy! v Learning Outcomes at the beginning of
each unit. Critical Thinking questions at the end of each article.
Correlation Guide: v www.mhhe.com/mhcp/CorrelationGuides/
AE_Mass_Media_1112.pdf
This convenient guide matches the units in v Annual Editions:
Mass Medi a 11/12 with the corresponding chapters in three of
our best-selling McGraw-Hill Mass Communication textbooks by
Dominick, Rodman, and Baran.
CONTENTS
Preface
Correlation Guide
Topic Guide
Internet References
Unit 1: Living with Media
1. In the Beginning Was the Word
2. Revolution in a Box
3. Tele[re]vision
4. Research on the Effects of Media Violence, Media Awareness
Network
5. Wikipedia in the Newsroom
6. J ournalist Bites Reality!
7. Girls Gone Anti-Feminist
Unit 2: Telling Stories
8. The Reconstruction of American J ournalism
9. Peytonplace.com
10. Capital Flight
11. Overload!: J ournalisms Battle for Relevance in an Age of Too
Much Informa-tion
12. Dont Blame the J ournalism: The Economic and Technological
Forces behind the Collapse of Newspapers
13. What the Mainstream Media Can Learn from J on Stewart
14. Whatever Happened to Iraq?: How the Media Lost Interest in a
Long-Running War with No End in Sight
Unit 3: Players and Guides
15. Whats a Fair Share in the Age of Google?: How to Think about
News in the Link Economy
16. Economic and Business Dimensions: Is the Internet a Maturing
Market?
17. Ideastream: The New Public Media
18. Too Graphic?
19. Carnage.com
20. Distorted Picture
21. The Quality-Control Quandary
22. What Would You Do?: The J ournalism That Tweaks Reality, Then
Reports What Happens
23. The Lives of Others: What Does It Mean to Tell Someones
Story?
24. A Porous Wall
Unit 4: A Word from Our Sponsor
25. How Can YouTube Survive?
26. But Whos Counting?
27. Brain Candy
28. Multitasking Youth
29. Tossed by a Gale
30. Open for Business
31. Nonprofit News
32. Ariannas Answer
Test-Your-Knowledge Form
Article Rating Form
I nt r oduc t i on t o
El ec t r oni c Medi a
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
NEW
*9780073512037*
BROADCASTI NG CABLE
THE I NTERNET AND
BEYOND
An I nt r oduc t i on t o Moder n
El ec t r oni c Medi a,
7t h Edi t i on
Joseph R Dominick, University of Georgia
Barry L Sherman (deceased)
Fritz J Messere, State University of NY - Oswego
2012 / 352 pages
ISBN: 9780073512037
ISBN: 9780071315036 [IE]
Available: March 2011
www.mhhe.com/dominick7e
This survey of the eld of modern electronic media includes the
new technologies, regulations, programming, and competition that
affect our world and the broadcasting industry. The text conveys the
excitement of the industry in a highly accessible style that makes
even the most difcult information understandable.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
The Impact of the Recession v at decades end, new technology,
including HDTV and mobile TV, and the changing legal and regulatory
environment ushered in by a new administration in Washington are
now included in an updated Chapter 1.
The Development of the DVD and Blu-Ray Disc v , along with
a discussion of the history of portable media, are covered in Chapter
2.
Completely Revised Chapter 3 v now includes an extended
discussion of digital audio and video production, transmission and
storage techniques as well as a description of wireless technology.
The Basics of the Internet v , the Internets impact on traditional
media, the growth of social media, and audio and video on the web
are covered in a refocused Chapter 6.
Internet Adverti si ng Chal l enges and Opportuni ti es v are
included in a new section in Chapter 7.
The Effects of Social Media on News Coverage v are covered
in a new discussion in Chapter 9.
The Latest Research v is found in Chapter 13, concerning violent
video games and the impact of the electronic media, particularly social
media, on the political process.
CONTENTS
Part One: Foundations
Introduction
1 History of Broadcast Media
2 History of Cable, Home Video, and the Internet
3 Audio and Video Technology
Part Two: How It Is
4 Radio Today
5 Broadcast and Cable/Satellite TV Today
6 The Internet, Web Audio, and Web Video
Mass Communi c at i on
16
Part Three: How Its Done
7 The Business of Broadcasting, Cable, and New Media
8 Radio Programming
9 TV Programming
Part Four: How Its Controlled
10 Rules and Regulations
11 Self-Regulation and Ethics
Part Five: What It Does
12 Ratings and Audience Feedback
13 Effects
Glossary
Credits
Index
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
ELECTRONI C MEDI A
An I nt r oduc t i on, 10t h Edi t i on
Lynne Schafer Gross
2010 / 464 pages
ISBN: 9780073378862
ISBN: 9780070169005 [IE]
Available: May 2009
www.mhhe.com/gross10e
This concise, student-friendly text teaches the essentials of electronic
media and telecommunications. Exploring both the background
and structure of this ever-evolving industry and the many ways in
which media affects our lives, the text is directed at all students as
consumers of media, as well as at students who plan to be media
producers. The rst section focuses on the various media forms (e.g.
radio, the Internet), while the second addresses the functions of media
(programming, advertising, etc.). The tenth edition features expanded
coverage of contemporary methods and usages of communication,
as well as the social signicance of media, and how to obtain a job
in electronic media.
CONTENTS
Part 1--Electronic Media Forms
Chapter 1 The Significance of Electronic Media
Chapter 2 The Internet, Portable Devices, and Video Games
Chapter 3 Early Television
Chapter 4 Modern Television
Chapter 5 Radio
Chapter 6 Movies
Part 2--Electronic Media Functions
Chapter 7 Careers in Electronic Media
Chapter 8 Programming
Chapter 9 Sales and Advertising
Chapter 10 Promotion and Audience Feedback
Chapter 11 Laws and Regulations
Chapter 12 Ethics and Effects
Chapter 13 Technical Underpinnings
Chapter 14 The International Scene
Medi a Wr i t i ng
NEW
*9780073512006*
MEDI A WRI TERS HANDBOOK
A Gui de t o Common Wr i t i ng and Edi t i ng
Pr obl ems, 6t h Edi t i on
George T Arnold, Marshall University
2013 / 384 pages
ISBN: 9780073512006
Available: March 2012
[Details unavailable at press time]
McGrow-H||| |s |nterested to rev|ew your
textbook proposo|s |or pub||cot|on.
F|eose contoct your |oco| McGrow-H||| o|0ce or
emo|| to os|opubmcgrow-h|||.com.
V|s|t McGrow-H||| Educot|on [As|o}
Webs|te: http:JJwww.mheducot|on.os|oJpub||shJ
Inv|tot|on to Fub||sh
Jour nal i sm
17
Br oadc ast New s Wr i t i ng
and Pr oduc t i on
BROADCAST NEWS HANDBOOK
4t h Edi t i on
C A Tuggle, University of NC-Chapel Hill
Forrest Carr, WFLA-TV
Suzanne Huffman, Texas Christian University
2011 / 368 pages
ISBN: 9780073511962
Available: April 2010
www.mhhe.com/tuggle4e
Broadcast News Handbook enables students and professionals to
become better writers and better broadcast journalists. Backed by
50 years of combined broadcast journalism experience, the authors
provide helpful discussions on crafting language and becoming an
effective storyteller. Topics addressed include Deadly Copy Sins
and How to Avoid Them; Interviewing: Getting the Facts and the
Feelings; Producing TV News; and Writing Sports.
CONTENTS
Chapter 1: Characteristics of Broadcast News Writing
Chapter 2: Selecting Stories and Starting to Write
Chapter 3: Writing Great Leads and Other Helpful Tips
Chapter 4: Deadly Copy Sins and How to Avoid Them
Chapter 5: Interviewing: Getting the Facts and the Feelings
Chapter 6: Writing Radio News
Chapter 7: Television News Story Forms--The VO
Chapter 8: Television Story Forms--The VO/SOT
Chapter 9: Television Story Forms--The Package
Chapter 10: Writing Sports Copy
Chapter 11: Producing TV News
Chapter 12: The Care and Feeding of Television Live Shots
Chapter 13: Why We Fight
Chapter 14: Writing for the Web
Chapter 15: So You Want a J ob? The Art of the Resume
Appendix A: Word Usage and Grammar Guide
Appendix B: Legal and Privacy FAQs
Appendix C: Producing a Student Newscast from Beginning to End
Glossary
Index
New s Wr i t i ng &
Repor t i ng
NEW
*9780073512006*
MEDI A WRI TERS HANDBOOK
A Gui de t o Common Wr i t i ng and Edi t i ng
Pr obl ems, 6t h Edi t i on
George T Arnold, Marshall University
2013 / 384 pages
ISBN: 9780073512006
Available: March 2012
[Details unavailable at press time]
NEW
*9780073526171*
I NSI DE REPORTI NG
3r d Edi t i on
Tim Harrower
2013 / 352 pages
ISBN: 9780073526171
Available: June 2012
[Details unavailable at press time]
MELVI N MENCHERS NEWS REPORTI NG
AND WRI TI NG
12t h Edi t i on
Melvin Mencher, Columbia University
2011 / 640 pages
ISBN: 9780073511993
Available: February 2010
www.mhhe.com/mencher12e
More than a quarter of a million students have learned the craft
and ethics of journalism from Melvin Menchers News Reporting
and Writing. This classic text shows students the fundamentals of
reporting and writing and examines the values that direct and underlie
the practice of journalism. The changing nature of electronic media
today may make this a scary time for journalism students, but it also
presents an opportunity for young journalists to shape the direction
of new media.
CONTENTS
Part I. The Reporter At Work
1. On the J ob
Part II. The Basics
2. Components of the Story
Part III. Writing the Story
3. What Is News?
4. The Internet and Other Tools of the Trade
5. The Lead
6. Story Structure
7. The Writers Art
8. Features, Long Stories and Series
9. Broadcast Newswriting
10. Writing News Releases
Part IV. Reporting Principles
11. Digging for Information
12. Making Sound Observations
13. Building and Using Background
14. Finding, Cultivating and Using Sources
15. Interviewing Principles and Practices
16. Speeches, Meetings and News Conferences
17. Hunches, Feelings and Stereotypes
Part V. From Accidents to Education
18. Accidents and Disasters
19. Obituaries
20. The Police Beat
21. The Courts
22. Sports
23. Business Reporting
24. Local Government and Education
Part VI. Laws, Taste and Taboos, Codes and Ethics
25. Reporters and the Law
26. Taste--Defining the Appropriate
27. The Morality of J ournalism
Stylebook
Glossary
Index
Jour nal i sm
18
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
NEWS WRI TI NG AND REPORTI NG FOR
TODAYS MEDI A
7t h Edi t i on
Bruce D Itule, Arizona State UniversityTempe
Douglas A Anderson, Penn State University-University Park
2007 / 560 pages
ISBN: 9780071275828 [IE]
Available: April 2006
www.mhhe.com/itule7
CONTENTS
Part One: The Fourth Estate
Chapter 1: Todays Media
Chapter 2: Ingredients of News
Part Two: The Rudiments
Chapter 3: Qualities of Good Writing
Chapter 4: Summary Leads
Chapter 5: Organizing a News Story
Chapter 6: Developing a News Story
Chapter 7: Quotations and Attribution
Chapter 8: Special Leads
Chapter 9: Features
Part Three: Gathering Information
Chapter 10: Interviewing
Chapter 11: Computer-Assisted Reporting and Research
Chapter 12: By the Numbers
Part Four: Basic Assignments
Chapter 13: Obituaries
Chapter 14: Speeches and Press Conferences
Chapter 15: Weather and Disasters
Chapter 16: Broadcast Writing
Chapter 17: Multimedia J ournalism
Chapter 18: News Releases
Part Five: Beats
Chapter 19: Multicultural Reporting
Chapter 20: Local Government and Public Meetings
Chapter 21: Police and Fire
Chapter 22: Courts
Chapter 23: Sports
Part Six: Advanced Assignments
Chapter 24: In-Depth and Investigative Reporting
Chapter 25: Business News and Other Specialties
Part Seven: Beyond The Writing
Chapter 26: Law
Chapter 27: Ethics and Fairness: Responsibility to Society
Appendix A: Gannett Newspaper Division Principles of Ethical
Conduct for Newsrooms
Appendix B: Associated Press Style Rules
Appendix C: Glossary
New spaper & Magazi ne
Desi gn / Layout
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
NEW
*9780073512044*
THE NEWSPAPER DESI GNERS HANDBOOK
7t h Edi t i on
Tim Harrower
2013 / 320 pages
ISBN: 9780073512044
ISBN: 9780071318303 [IE]
Available: June 2012
www.mhhe.com/harrower7e
[Details unavailable at press time]
Publ i c Rel at i ons &
Adver t i si ng
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
NEW
*9780073512051*
PUBLI C RELATI ONS
The Pr of essi on and
t he Pr ac t i c e, 4t h Edi t i on
Dan L Lattimore, University of Memphis
Otis W Baskin, Pepperdine University
Suzette T Heiman, University of Missouri-Columbia
Elizabeth L Toth, University of Maryland-
College Park
2012 / 448 pages
ISBN: 9780073512051
ISBN: 9780071315784 [IE] hold release till Jan 2012
Available: January 2012
www.mhhe.com/lattimore4e
Coverage of global markets, new technologies, multiculturalism, and
the latest news about public relations in action make this dynamic
text the cutting-edge choice for public relations courses. In a personal
and jargon-free style, this text presents and explains the fundamental
tools of public relations practice, providing a multi-disciplinary
understanding of the emerging trends within the eld, with spotlights
on people and issues of interest to students.
NEW TO THIS EDITION
New Material on Social and Interactive Media v and its use
by public relations has been incorporated into Chapter 9, while
maintaining the traditional media relations foundation.
REVIEW COPY
(Available for course adoption only)
To request for a review copy,
contact your local McGraw-Hill
representatives or,
fax the Review Copy Request Form found
in this catalog or,
e-mail your request to
mghasia_sg@mcgraw-hill.com or,
submit online at www.mheducation.asia
Jour nal i sm
19
New Key Spotlights v feature Betsy Ann Plank and J ames Grunig,
two leaders in public relations.
New Cases and Mini-Cases v look at J et Blue, GM, Haagen
Dazs, AFLAC, and green jobs.
End-of-Chapter Cases v provide longer, more in-depth material
and questions for student involvement and learning.
A New Appendix v assists students in creating video content and
breaking broadcast barriers.
CONTENTS
Preface
About the Authors
Part I: The Profession
Chapter 1. The Nature of Public Relations
Chapter 2. The History of Public Relations
Chapter 3. A Theoretical Basis for Public Relations
Chapter 4. Law and Ethics
Part II: The Process
Chapter 5. Research: Understanding Public Opinion
Chapter 6. Strategic Planning for Public Relations Effectiveness
Chapter 7. Action and Communication
Chapter 8. Evaluating Public Relations Effectiveness
Part III: The Publics
Chapter 9. Social Media and Traditional Media Relations
Chapter 10. Employee Communication
Chapter 11. Community Relations
Chapter 12. Consumer Relations and Marketing
Chapter 13. Investor Relations
Part IV: The Practice
Chapter 14. Public Affairs: Relations with Government
Chapter 15. Public Relations in Nonprofit Organizations
Chapter 16. Corporate Public Relations
Appendix 1: Writing
Appendix 2: Speechmaking
Appendix 3: Video
INTERNATIONAL EDITION
PUBLI C RELATI ONS WRI TI NG: THE
ESSENTI ALS OF STYLE AND FORMAT
6t h Edi t i on
Thomas H Bivins, University of Oregon
2008 / Softcover / 400 pages
ISBN: 9780071101837 [IE]
Available: June 2007
www.mhhe.com/bivins6
This text equips students with the essential skills for developing and
writing public relations materials, covering all areas of public relations
writing--including news releases, backgrounders, newsletter and
magazine articles, brochures, print advertising copy, and broadcast
scripts. Recent technological changes are also covered to give
students an understanding of how technology impacts the public
relations industry. In the constantly changing world of public relations,
the text continues to stress the need for public relations professionals
to communicate more effectively to all audiences.
CONTENTS
PREFACE
Chapter 1: Writing for Public Relations
Chapter 2: Planning and Research
Chapter 3: Choosing the Right Message and Medium
Chapter 4: Media Relations and Placement
Chapter 5: Design, Printing, and Desktop Publishing
Chapter 6: News Releases and Backgrounders
Chapter 7: Newsletters, Magazines, and Feature Writing
Chapter 8: Brochures and other Informational Pieces
Chapter 9: Annual & Social Responsibility Reports
Chapter 10: Print Advertising
Chapter 11: Television and Radio
Chapter 12: Speeches and Presentations
Chapter 13: Computer Writing and the Internet
Chapter 14: Ethical and Legal Issues in Public Relations Writing
McGrow-H||| |s |nterested to rev|ew your
textbook proposo|s |or pub||cot|on.
F|eose contoct your |oco| McGrow-H||| o|0ce or
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Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
20
Fi l m & Tel evi si on St udi es
WHAT I S FI LM THEORY?
Richard Rushton and Gary Bettison, Both at Lancaster University, UK
2011 (February 2010) / 224 pages
ISBN: 9780335234233 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335234226 (Hardback)
This essential textbook provides an excellent introduction to lm
theory. It describes what lm theory is; which theories and philosophies
have fed in to its existence; and the essential theories that now make
up lm studies. The book will explore a range of important topics
including: semiotics and structuralism, psychoanalysis, formalist lm
theory, cultural approaches, cognitive approaches and neo-formalism.
It is also packed with accessible features designed for students such
as bullet points, boxed case studies and end-of-chapter questions.
CONTENTS
Introduction: What is film theory?
Structuralism and semiotics: The foundations of contemporary film
theory
Apparatus theory: J ean-Louis Baudry and Christian Metz
Screen theory: Colin MacCabe and Stephen Heath
Feminist film theory: Visual pleasure and identificatory practices
Cinemas of the other: Postcolonialism, race and queer theory
Philosophy and film: Stanley Cavell and Gilles Deleuze
Film as art: Historical poetics and neoformalism
The cognitive turn: Narrative comprehension and character
identification / Recent developments: Phenomenology, attractions
and audience research.
USI NG VI SUAL EVI DENCE
Richard Howells, Kings College
Robert Matson (eds), University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown
2009 (June 2009)/ 200 pages
ISBN: 9780335228645 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335228638 (Hardback)
This comprehensive and insightful edited collection brings together
media and cultural theorists, historians and art historians to introduce
visual literacy for students of media and cultural studies, lm, history
and general humanities and social science studies. Taking key visual
medias such as painting, cartoons, photography, lm, television and
documentary the book shows students how to read the visual medium
to elicit meaning from the text, as well as exploring the historical aspect
of the text or the image.
CONTENTS
Introduction
Painting as visual evidence
Showing politics to the people: Cartoons, comics and satirical
prints
Impressed by natures hand: Photography and authorship
Actuality and affect in documentary photography
Interpreting vernacular photography, finding me: A case study
Newsreels: Form and function
Documentaries: A gold mine historians should begin to exploit
More than just entertainment: The feature film and the historian
The visual culture of television news
What planet are we on? Television dramas relationships with social
reality
The privileged discourse: Advertising as an interpretive key to the
consumer culture
CI NEMA ENTERTAI NMENT
Bestseller
Essays on Audi enc es, Fi l ms and Fi l m
Maker s
Alan Lovell, formerly at Staffordshire University
Gianluca Sergi, University of Nottingham, UK
2009 (April 2009) / 140 pages
ISBN: 9780335222513 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335222520 (Hardback)
Entertainment is a dening feature of contemporary culture, yet it is
often accused of being supercial and even harmful. In this thought-
provoking book, the authors challenge this negative view and argue
for a reconsideration of the value of entertainment and the effect it
has on the world in which we live. Taking Hollywood cinema as its
central focus, this exciting book explores and critiques the range of
debates that the phenomenon of cinema entertainment has provoked.
It is packed with examples from modern, popular lms throughout,
including a whole chapter on the hugely successful lm, The Dark
Knight. The book features interviews with lmmakers involved in
creating some of the most successful lms of recent years as well
as critical discussion of the work and reputation of Steven Spielberg
and Alfred Hitchcock, names which have become synonymous with
cinema entertainment.
CONTENTS
Introduction: Cinema as entertainment
What audiences go for: Elite and mass taste
Sensual pleasure, audiences and The Dark Knight
Alfred Hitchcock: The entertainer becomes an artist Steven Spielberg,
Indiana J ones and the Holocaust Filmmakers as entertainers?
Interviews with Randy Thom and Walter Murch
The entertainment discourse
Bibliographical notes
Appendix 1: Methodology for statistical analysis
Appendix 2a: Walter Murchs filmography
Appendix 2b: Randy
Thoms filmography
Appendix 3: Art
Appendix 4: Credits for The Dark KnightDocumentaries online
RETHI NKI NG DOCUMENTARY Bestseller
New Per spec t i ves and Pr ac t i c es
Thomas Austin and Wilma de Jong (eds), Both at the University of Sussex,
UK
2008 / 376 pages
ISBN: 9780335221912 (Paperback)
The early years of the 21st century have witnessed signicant
changes in the technological, commercial, aesthetic, political, and
social dimensions of documentaries on lm, television and the web.
This book rethinks the notion of documentary, in terms of theory,
practice and object/s of study. Drawing together 26 original essays
from scholars and practitioners, it critically assesses ideas and
constructions of documentary and, where necessary, proposes new
tools and arguments with which to examine this complex and shifting
terrain. Rethinking Documentary is valuable reading for scholars and
students working in documentary theory and practice, lm studies
and media studies.
CONTENTS
Part One - Critical perspectives on documentary forms and concepts
Part Two - The changing face of documentary production
Part Three - Contemporary documentary
Part Four Documentaries online
21
Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
THE BOLLYWOOD READER
Rajinder Dudrah, University of Manchester
Jigna Desai (eds), University of Minnesota
2008 / 384 pages
ISBN: 9780335222124 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335222131 (Hardback)
This book provides a road map of the scholarship on modern Hindi
cinema in India, with an emphasis on understanding the interplay
between cinema and colonialism, nationalism, and globalization. It
explores issues of capitalism, nationalism, Orientalism, and modernity
through understandings of race, class, gender and sexuality, religion,
and politics as depicted in Indian popular films. The editors draw on
essays that seek to understand the relationship between popular
culture, political economy and the social imaginary of the nation-state.
The contributors raise a variety of issues specific to the medium itself,
including the development of particular genres, narrative forms, and
exegetic and textual elements including musical and dance numbers,
as well as questions of spectatorship, audience and institutional
formations.
FEMI NI ST TELEVI SI ON CRI TI CI SM
2nd Edi t i on
Charlotte Brunsdon, University of Warwick, UK
Lynn Spiegel (eds), Northwestern University, USA
2007 / 352 pages
ISBN: 9780335225453 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335225446 (Hardback)
This new edition has been completely revised to take account of
changes in the television industries, the academic eld of television
studies, and the culture and politics of feminist movements. The
readings offer a detailed analysis of a wide range of specic case
studies, while also engaging a series of debates on the main issues for
feminist television scholarship. The book investigates how television
represents feminism and considers how critics themselves have
created feminism and post-feminism as historical categories and
political identities. It looks at women who are engaged in various
aspects of television production on both sides of the camera and how
women respond to and use television in their everyday lives.
Key Text Bestseller
THE CULT FI LM READER
Ernest Mathijs, University of British Columbia, Canada
Xavier Mendik, Brunel University, UK
2007 / 576 pages
ISBN: 9780335219230 (Paperback)
The Cult Film Reader is the rst reader of its kind to contain the major
essays written on the structure, form, status, and reception of global
cult cinema traditions. It includes work from key established scholars
in the eld, as well as new takes on the gradually developing canon of
cult cinema. The book not only presents an overview of ways in which
cult cinema can be approached, it also reassesses the methods used
to study the cult text and its audience. It dissects some of biggest
trends, icons, auteurs and periods of global cult lm production. Films
discussed include well-known classics like Casablanca, The Rocky
Horror Picture Show, Showgirls and Ginger Snaps.
THE ANI MATI ON PRODUCERS HANDBOOK
Lea Milic, Producer at Jim Keeshen Productions in Santa Monica,
California, USA
Yasmin McConville, Producer at Yoram Gross/EM TV in Sydney,
Australia
2006 / 224 pages
ISBN: 9780335220366 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335220373 (Hardback)
Animation is one of the fastest-growing elds in lm and television, and
it is also integral to video games and web development. Drawing on
their extensive experience in the eld, the authors offer a systematic
overview of the role of the animation producer and the production
process. They explain how to develop a concept, pitch it to obtain
funding, and nd a market. They offer detailed advice on recruiting
a team, managing different stages of production (including overseas
suppliers), quality control, budgeting, scheduling and outline the key
aspects of 2D and 3D production.
THE MOVI E BUSI NESS BOOK
3r d Edi t i on
Jason E. Squire, University of Southern California, USA, and former lm
executive at United Artists, Twentieth Century Fox and Embassy Pictures,
California, USA
2006 / 584 pages
ISBN: 9780335220021 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335220038 (Hardback)
The Movie Business Book is a comprehensive overview of the lm
industry from a professional perspective. Edited by J ason E. Squire,
it brings together advice and information from industry professionals
such as Mel Brooks,William Goldman, Sydney Pollack and David
Puttnam. Its a sourcebook which gives a good overview of the
Hollywood lm system covering such topics as marketing, revenue
streams and new technologies.
Key Text
CONTEMPORARY AMERI CAN CI NEMA
Linda Ruth Williams and Michael Hammond (eds), Both at University of
Southampton, UK
2006 / 584 pages
ISBN: 9780335218318 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335218325 (Hardback)
One of the rare collections I would recommend for use in
undergraduate teaching the chapters are lucid without being
oversimplied and the contributors are adept at analyzing the key
industrial, technological and ideological features of contemporary US
cinema. Diane Negra, University of East Anglia, UK.
Contemporary American Cinema is the first comprehensive
introduction to American cinema since 1960. The book is unique
in its treatment of both Hollywood, alternative and non-mainstream
cinema. Critical essays from leading lm scholars are supplemented
by boxed proles of key directors, producers and actors; key lms
and key genres; and statistics from the cinema industry. It is richly
illustrated in colour and black and white with lm stills, posters and
production images. Designed especially for courses in cinema and
lm studies, cultural studies and American studies, the book features a
glossary of key terms, fully referenced resources and suggestions for
further reading, questions for class discussion, and a comprehensive
lmography.
Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
22
I TV CULTURES
I ndependent Tel evi si on over Fi f t y Year s
Catherine Johnson and Rob Turnock (eds), Both at Royal Holloway,
University of London, UK
2005 / 256 pages
ISBN: 9780335217298 (Paperback)
This book is the rst to offer a range of new perspectives on the
complex and multifaceted history of Britains first commercial
broadcaster. It explores key tensions and conicts which have
inuenced the ITV service and provides an intervention in debates
in broadcasting history for academics and researchers, and a critical
introduction to the history of ITV for students and general readers.
TELEVI SI ON AND SEXUALI TY
Regul at i on and t he Pol i t i c s of Tast e
Jane Arthurs, University of the West of England, Bristol, UK
2004 / 208 pages
ISBN: 9780335209750 (Paperback)
In recent years there has been a marked increase in both the volume
and diversity of sexual imagery and talk on television, condemned by
some as a rising tide of lth, celebrated by others as a liberation
from the regulations of the past. This book questions both these
responses through an examination of televisions multiple channels
and genres, and the wide range of sexual information and pleasures
they provide.
ICMS Series
CI NEMA AND CULTURAL MODERNI TY
Gill Branston
2001 / 224 pages
ISBN: 9780335200764 (Paperback)
ICMS Series
TELEVI SI ON, GLOBALI ZATI ON AND
CULTURAL I DENTI TI ES
Chris Barker
1999 / 208 pages
ISBN: 9780335199549 (Paperback)
New Medi a
NEW LI TERACI ES
3r d Edi t i on
Colin Lankshear, James Cook University
Michele Knobel, Central Queensland University
2011 (July 2011) / 304 pages
ISBN: 9780335242160
New Literacies, Third Edition explores new literacies, knowledge
and classroom practices in light of growing electronic information
and communication techniques. This edition is thoroughly updated to
reect the rapidly changing nature of this eld, with new chapters on
Online Social Networking and Social Learning. It features a substantial
examination of social practices, providing a theoretical foundation
for the book. Covering key practices, New Literacies is essential
for undergraduate and postgraduate students of literacy teaching
courses, those pursuing a PhD, literacy educators and academics,
and other policy writers and curriculum developers working in digital
literacy.
CONTENTS
Part 1: Whats new?
From Reading to Digital Literacies
New literacies and competing mindsets
New literacies: Social practices and participatory culture
Part 2: New literacies in everyday practices
Digital remix: Culture and practice
Everyday practices of online social networking
Blogging and online writing as participatory cultural practices
Part 3: New literacies and social learning
Social learning in theory and practice
New literacies and social learning within formal educational
settings
DI GI TAL CULTURE
Under st andi ng New Medi a
Glen Creeber and Royston Martin, Both at the University of Aberystwyth,
UK
2008 / 264 pages
ISBN: 9780335221974 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335221981 (Hardback)
From Facebook to the iPhone, from YouTube to Wikipedia, this book
explores new medias most important issues and debates to create
a lively and original introductory text for newcomers to the eld. With
technological change continuing to unfold at an incredible rate, it
rounds-up major events in the medias recent past to help develop a
clear understanding of both the theoretical and practical debates that
surround this emerging discipline. The authors use case studies to
sit along side the main chapters so that there is a balance between
the well-trodden and the newly emerging topics within the eld as a
whole. Topics explored include: digital television, digital cinema, game
culture, the World Wide Web, online social networking, music and
multimedia, virtual communities and the digital divide.
REVIEW COPY
(Available for course adoption only)
To request for a review copy,
contact your local McGraw-Hill
representatives or,
fax the Review Copy Request Form found
in this catalog or,
e-mail your request to
mghasia_sg@mcgraw-hill.com or,
submit online at www.mheducation.asia
23
Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
ICMS Series
MEDI A TECHNOLOGY
Cr i t i c al Per spec t i ves
Joost Van Loon, Nottingham Trent University, UK
2007 / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335214464 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335214471 (Hardback)
Using philosophical and historical analysis, this book illustrates how
throughout the course of society, different forms of media have helped
to shape our perceptions, expectations and interpretations. Drawing
on the work of authors such as Heidegger, Benjamin and Baudrillard,
it provides a deeper theoretical analysis of the complexity of mediation
processes. Illustrated with examples from both old and new media,
readers are encouraged to think through complex issues in proactive
ways. Using technologies such as television, radio, computer games
and domestic appliances, it provides a critical insight into how we
understand reality. It discusses the nature of the virtual as that
which mediates between the real and pure imagination or fantasy,
providing online gaming as an example.
ICMS Series
GAME CULTURES
Comput er Games as New Medi a
Jon Dovey, University of Bristol
Helen W. Kennedy, University of the West of England, UK
2006 / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335213573 (Paperback)
This book offers an overview of the critical concepts and debates that
shape the emerging eld of game studies. It analyses computer games
as the most popular contemporary form of new media production and
consumption. The authors explore games in the context of cultural and
media studies and uses them as a critical site for the examination of
the impact of new media on established frameworks and concepts.
The book:
Argues for the centrality of play in redefining reading, consuming v
and creating culture
Offers detailed research into the political economy of games that v
generates a model of new media production
Examines the dynamics of power in relation to both the production v
and consumption of computer games
MOBI LE AND WI RELESS
COMMUNI CATI ONS
An I nt r oduc t i on
Gordon A. Gow, University of Alberta
Richard K. Smith, Simon Fraser University, Canada
2006 / 184 pages
ISBN: 9780335217618 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335217625 (Hardback)
The mobile information society has revolutionised the way we
work, communicate and socialise. Mobile phones, wireless free
communication and associated technologies such as WANs, LANs,
and PANs, cellular networks, SMS, 3G, Bluetooth, Blackberry
and WiFi are seen as the driving force of the advanced society.
Providing a succinct introduction to the eld of mobile and wireless
communications, this book:
Begins with the basics of radio technology and offers an overview v
of key scientific terms and concepts for the student reader
Uses a range of case studies and examples of mobile and v
wireless ommunication, legislation and practices from the UK, US,
Canada, ainland Europe, the Far East and Australia
Contains illustrations and tables to help explain technical v
concepts and show the growth and change in mobile technologies
Features a glossary of technical terms, annotated further v
reading at the end of each chapter and web links for further study
and research
THE NEW MEDI A THEORY
Reader
Robert Hassan and Julian Thomas (eds), Both at Swinburne University,
Australia
2006 / 352 pages
ISBN: 9780335217106 (Paperback)
This is an indispensable text for students on new media, technology,
sociology and media studies courses. It brings together a number of
key readings from international contributors on new media what it
is, where it came from, how it affects our lives, the political economy,
and how it is managed. It combines key historical readings on the
subject and more recent writings. As well as a general introduction to
the book, there is an editors introduction to each thematic section.
DOMESTI CATI ON OF MEDI A AND
TECHNOLOGY
Thomas Berker, Norwegian University of Science and Technology,
Norway
Maren Hartmann, University of Erfurt, Germany
Yves Punie, Institute for Prospective Technological Studies (IPTS) in
Seville, Spain
Katie Ward (eds), University of Shefeld, UK
2005 / 240 pages
ISBN: 9780335217687 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335217694 (Hardback)
The book provides a theoretical and empirical overview on a key
concept in media and technology studies: domestication. Theories
around domestication shed light upon the process in which a
technology changes its status from an outrageous novelty to an
aspect of everyday life which is just there and taken for granted. The
contributors provide insights for both experienced researchers and
students looking for an introduction into the concept.
ICMS Series
MEDI A, POLI TI CS AND THE NETWORK
SOCI ETY
Robert Hassan, Swinburne University, Australia
2004 / 176 pages
ISBN: 9780335213153 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335213160 (Hardback)
The rise of the network society the suffusion of much of the economy,
culture and society with digital interconnectivity is a development
of immense signicance. In this innovative book, Robert Hassan
unpacks the dynamics of this new information order and shows how
they have affected both the way media and politics are played, and
how these are set to reshape and reorder our world. This is a key
text for undergraduate students in media studies, politics, cultural
studies and sociology.
Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
24
Medi a St udi es
Key Text Bestseller
MEDI A AND SOCI ETY
2nd Edi t i on
Graeme Burton, Visiting Lecturer in Media Studies, University of
Teesside, UK
2011 (May 2010) / 352 pages
ISBN: 9780335227235 (Paperback)
This popular introductory book provides a clear introduction to the key
ideas within media studies. The friendly writing style and everyday
examples, which made the rst edition a favourite with students and
lecturers alike, has been retained and updated in this new edition.
This comprehensive text provides a wide-ranging perspective on
the Media and:
Uses examples and case studies from the real world v
Shows how key concepts can help us understand the relationship v
between the Media and society
Provides a clear explanation of how critical perspectives on v
the Media construct thinking about media businesses, texts and
audiences
The fully updated new edition features new boxed summaries of
critical approaches and key thinkers. Chapters cover the main
topics that students are likely to encounter in their studies, including
advertising, media and violence, news, politics, young audiences,
globalization, sport, popular music and new technology. This book is
essential reading for students in Media Studies, Cultural Studies and
courses with a media interest, such as Sociology and English. Please
visit our supporting website for two additional chapters on Approaches
to Film and Gendered Magazines: www.openup.co.uk/burton
CONTENTS
Introduction
Media texts: Features and deconstructions
Media institutions: Key areas and their implications for understanding
media
Audiences and effects: Defining audiences and exploring their
relationships with texts
Media--audience--influence: Questions of effects: politics, children,
violence
Popular music: Questioning the popular, questioning control,
questioning the global
The media and new technology: Technologies changing the media
and changing consumption
Advertising: Its relationship with media industries and with
audiences
News: Different kinds of news: Constructing the world
Sport and representation: Media defining sport; sport as business;
sport and meaning
Globalization and the media: Questions of power and cultural
exchange
Glossary
References
Selected websites
CHI LDREN, MEDI A AND CULTURE
Mire Messenger Davies, University of Ulster, Ireland
2011 (April 2010) / 208 pages
ISBN: 9780335229208 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335229192 (Hardback)
This essential book begins by offering insights into children and the
media from both historical and contemporary perspectives. Through
the use of quotations and examples, contrasting cultural issues are
compared and discussed in a thought provoking manner. For example:
children using the internet within their bedrooms, to the dangers of
children on the street and ASBOs.
Section two looks closely at forms of media designed for children.
The concepts are illustrated using engaging case studies including
Cinderella and Harry Potter.
CONTENTS
Section one: The child and its world(s): Different disciplinary
approaches to the study of children and media
The child today and yesterday
The science of childhood
The economics and politics of childrens culture
Children in media studies
The representation of children in media: the child as signifier
Section two: Media for children
Childrens traditional culture: playground games & fairytales: Case
study Cinderella
Childrens literature and screen adaptations
Non-fiction
Childrens news, childrens documentaries
The digital world - new media
Conclusion and summary
ICMS Series
MEDI ATI NG POLI TI CS
New spaper s, Radi o, Tel evi si on and t he
I nt er net
Neil Washbourne, Leeds Metropolitan University, UK
2010 (April 2010)/ 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335217595 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335217601 (Hardback)
This book explores the complex interconnections between media,
political organization and society. It focuses in particular on the way
new technology poses problems, but also offers potentialities and
solutions. Particular attention is paid to various political uses of the
internet. Using accessible case studies, the author closely analyses
how political parties, pressure groups, governments and social
movements explore and develop the range of media forms and
rhetorics and assesses the consequences this has for political life.
The book argues that key versions of the end of politics thesis are
simply too pessimistic about what we can hope for from the future
and imply an unrealistic nostalgia about the past. Rather it puts the
media-politics relationship into the broader context of a culturally
complex and changing contemporary information society.
CONTENTS
Are we witnessing the end of politics?
Marketing politics: Parties, leaders and governments in contemporary
mediated politics
The media-politics relations in national contexts: Comparing the press,
radio and television in the UK, US and India
Mediating governance: Problems of political and cultural representation
in a complex world
Exploring the contemporary audiences of mediated politics
The internet, politics and political change
Conclusion: The end of the beginning: They always mediate politics,
dont they?
25
Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
THE MEDI A I N RUSSI A
Anna Arutunyan, News editor and columnist at The Moscow News, Russia
2009 (August 2009) / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335228898 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335228904 (Hardback)
Providing both a description of the current playing eld and an
overview of Russian media history, this book serves as a unique
introduction, giving a consistent and comprehensive scope of the
chief problems faced by the Russian media. It considers the role
and power of the government and how the fall of the Communist
Party has impacted on the media. Using vivid examples of the power
play between television and the state during the tumultuous 1990s,
it describes a country where, even without censorship, media and
power are nancially intertwined and how this may affect journalists
ability to act as effective mediators between the people and the state.
There are chapters devoted to various forms of media; print, television,
radio and the internet and each of these topics is linked to specic
examples of contemporary issues and challenges.
CONTENTS
Introduction
The current media playing field
Media and power: Media ownership in the age of free market
Freedom in the Russian press
The Russian newspaper: then and now
Television and film
The role of radio: A common
THE MEDI A AND THEI R PUBLI CS
Michael Higgins, University of Sunderland, UK
2008 / 2087 pages
ISBN: 9780335219292 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335219308 (Hardback)
The public is so central to discussions of the role of broadcasting in
civil society that it often passes without comment. This book offers a
critical insight into this key component of media policy and practice.
. Ideas and activities around public opinion, public interest and public
service are introduced and opened to question, as are various routines
of framing public voices, representing the public and public advocacy.
Throughout the book, the relationship between media and the public
is shown to be central to wider issues of politics, governance, and
cultural inuence.
THE MEDI A I N LATI N AMERI CA
Jairo Lugo-Ocando (ed), University of Stirling, UK
2008 / 224 pages
ISBN: 9780335222018 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335222025 (Hardback)
This book provides a comprehensive and critical overview of some
of the most important media systems in Latin America. Drawing
on original and critical essays from some of the most prominent
authors in the eld, the author approaches the subject with a country-
bycountry analysis, exploring the most relevant aspects of the
media in each society. Essays include: media history, organization,
the interrelationship of the media and the state, and lm, music,
advertising and digital media
THE TABLOI D CULTURE READER
Anita Biressi and Heather Nunn (eds), Both at Roehampton University,
UK
2007 / 400 pages
ISBN: 9780335219315 (Paperback)
This wide-ranging and accessible Reader provides a useful
introduction to the historical and contemporary debates about the
values, ethics and pleasures of tabloid news, entertainment and
culture. Bringing together key writings from both new and leading
scholars in the eld, it addresses topics ranging from the Sun and
Mirror and mens lifestyle magazines through to reality TV and
talkshows, O.J . Simpson and Big Brothers J ade Goody, with specially
written prefaces to accompany each section.
ICMS Series
UNDERSTANDI NG ALTERNATI VE MEDI A
Olga Bailey, Nottingham Trent University
Bart Cammaerts, London School of Economics & Political Science, UK
Nico Carpentier, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium
2007 / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335222100 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335222117 (Hardback)
This clear and concise text offers a one-stop guide through the
complex political and economic debates that surround alternative
media. It explains what the alternative media are and shows the
reader how they can be studied. Using case studies from the UK and
Europe, the authors adopt an analytical approach as they look beyond
the traditional divide between alternative and mainstream media, and
explore those things which cross this divide.
THE MEDI A I N I TALY
Matthew Hibberd, University of Stirling, UK
2007 / 240 pages
ISBN: 9780335222858 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335222865 (Hardback)
In this introductory text, Matthew Hibberd explores the key historical
processes and events in the growth and development of Italys main
media and considers it in the context of the economic, political,
socio-cultural and technological movements that have affected Italy.
Featuring a timeline of key Italian events, the book begins with the
Unication - or Risorgimento - of Italy in 1861, and charts the rise of
Italy from a fragmented and rural-based society through to a leading
industrialised and urbanised world power.
Key Text
KEY THEMES I N I NTERPERSONAL
COMMUNI CATI ON
Anne Hill, Southampton Solent University
Mark Joyce, Southampton Solent University
Danny Rivers, West Kent College/University of Greenwich
James Watson, West Kent College/University of Greenwich, UK
2007 / 224 pages
ISBN: 9780335220533 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335220540 (Hardback)
This introductory text explores the role of interpersonal communication
in the formation of self and social-identity in an age of globalization,
social fragmentation and change. Topics include the exploration of the
nature of identity; consideration of the main models used to analyze
Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
26
the process of interpersonal communication, and the role of language
and non-verbal communication in the display of a range of identities
such as ethnic, social class and gender.
Key Text
KEY THEMES I N MEDI A THEORY
Dan Laughey, Leeds Metropolitan University, UK
2007 / 224 pages
ISBN: 9780335218134 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335218141 (Hardback)
Key Themes in Media Theory is wonderfully wide-ranging and
deservedly destined to become a key text for students of Media
Studies. Professor John Storey, University of Sunderland, UK
This book provides a thorough and critical introduction to the key
theories of media studies. It is unique in bringing together different
schools of media theory into a single, comprehensive text, examining
in depth the ideas of key media theorists such as Lasswell, McLuhan,
Hall,Williams, Barthes, Adorno, Baudrillard and Bourdieu. Using
up-to-date case studies the book embraces media in their everyday
cultural forms music, internet, lm, television, radio, newspapers
and magazines to enable a clearer view of the big picture of media
theory. In ten succinct chapters Dan Laughey discusses a broad range
of themes, issues and perspectives that inform our Contemporary
understanding of media production and consumption.
ICMS Series
MEDI ATI ZED CONFLI CT
Simon Cottle, Cardiff University, UK
2006 / 232 pages
ISBN: 9780335214525 (Paperback)
Mediatized Conict explores the powered dynamics, contested
representations and consequences of media conict reporting. It
examines how the media today do not simply report or represent
diverse situations of conict, but actively enact and perform them.
ICMS Series
CRI TI CAL READI NGS: MORAL PANI CS AND
THE MEDI A
Chas Critcher (ed), Shefeld Hallam University, UK
2006 / 400 pages
ISBN: 9780335218073 (Paperback)
In this book, Chas Critcher brings together essential readings on
moral panics, which he locates in contemporary debates through
an editors introduction and concise section introductions. The rst
section discusses moral panic models and the history and intellectual
background of the concept. A second section features case studies,
including AIDS, Satanism, drugs, paedophilia and asylum seekers.
This is followed by readings that look at themes such as the
importance of language, rhetoric and discourse and the idea of the
risk society. This is a valuable resource for students and researchers
in media studies, criminology and sociology.
ANALYSI NG MEDI A TEXTS Bestseller
(w i t h DVD)
Marie Gillespie and Jason Toynbee (eds), Both at The Open University,
UK
2006 / 160 pages
ISBN: 9780335218868 (Paperback + DVD-ROM)
Combining a book and a unique DVD-ROM, this is an essential guide
and resource which introduces the key conceptual tools of textual
analysis. It uses lively examples of how students can analyze the
media and helps them to apply the conceptual tools to their everyday
experiences of media texts. The accompanying DVD-ROM engages
students in a series of interactive tasks aimed at developing their
skills in textual analysis.
ICMS Series
CRI TI CAL READI NGS: VI OLENCE AND THE
MEDI A
C. Kay Weaver, University of Waikato, New Zealand
Cynthia Carter (eds), Cardiff University, UK
2006 / 400 pages
ISBN: 9780335218059 (Paperback)
This book brings together a selection of highly inuential readings
that have helped to shape this area of research. Contributors analyze
violence in different media formats, including television, lm, radio
and the news. They cover a range of perspectives, including social
learning, desensitisation and cultivation theories, no-effects models,
sociological, feminist and postmodern arguments.
UNDERSTANDI NG MEDI A
I nsi de Cel ebr i t y
Jessica Evans, The Open University
David Hesmondhalgh (eds), University of Leeds, UK
2005 / 176 pages
ISBN: 9780335218806 (Paperback)
This book introduces the study of the media in an innovative way using
the sustained example of celebrity. The authors take students carefully
through the chapters, using readings from important research and
providing carefully designed student activities. Across four chapters,
the construction of celebrity is examined using four essential concepts
in media studies: history, text, production and audiences.
MEDI A AUDI ENCES
Marie Gillespie (ed), The Open University, UK
2005 / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335218820 (Paperback)
This book offers an engaging and accessible introduction to key
debates in audience studies, drawing on a range of historical,
contemporary and cross-cultural case studies. The book includes
chapters on: different approaches to researching audiences and how
they link to policy and political agendas, and media technologies and
the shaping of sensory and social experience. Case studies range
from the sensational experiences of early twentieth-century lm
audiences to the practices of reality TV viewers, from the devotional
viewing of Hindu epics in India to the politics of interpreting news
among families in Israel.
27
Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
MEDI A PRODUCTI ON
David Hesmondhalgh (ed), University of Leeds,
2005 / 160 pages
ISBN: 9780335218844 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335218851 (Hardback)
This book goes behind the scenes to offer an essential introduction
to media production. It guides students through the key issues,
debates and controversies within the eld, including the power and
control in media organizations, audience and market research and
the experience of working in the media. The author uses readings
from key research and contemporary case studies, including The
Simpsons, Silvio Berlusconi, CNN, the BBC and Al-J azeera, audience
measurement devices, war and crime reporting, and rap music.
ICMS Series
MEDI A TALK
Conver sat i on Anal ysi s and t he St udy of
Br oadc ast i ng
Ian Hutchby, Brunel University, UK
2005 / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335209958 (Paperback)
This book introduces linguistic and discursive aspects of broadcast
media. It addresses a range of different forms of media talk and
describes how talk sets up channels and modes of communication
between broadcasters and their various audiences, offering examples
of how to analyze media talk.
ICMS Series
CI TI ZENS OR CONSUMERS?
The Medi a and t he Decl i ne of
Pol i t i c al Par t i c i pat i on
Justin Lewis, Cardiff University
Sanna Inthorn, University of Portsmouth
Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Cardiff University, UK
2005 / 224 pages
ISBN: 9780335215553 (Paperback)
This book enters the debate about general decline in civic participation
in both Britain and the US. It asks whether the news media have
played a role in producing a passive citizenry and, if so, what might
be done about it?
ICMS Series
MEDI A DI SCOURSES
Anal ysi ng Medi a Tex t s
Donald Matheson, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
2005 / 176 pages
ISBN: 9780335214693 (Paperback)
Media Discourses introduces readers to discourse analysis to show
how media communication works. Written in a lively style and drawing
on examples from contemporary media, each chapter discusses
a particular media genre, including the news, advertising, reality
television and weblogs. At the same time, each chapter also introduces
a range of approaches to media discourse, from analysis of linguistic
details to the rules of conversation and the discursive construction of
selfhood. A glossary explains key terms and suggestions for further
reading are given at the end of each chapter.
ICMS Series
CRI TI CAL READI NGS: MEDI A AND GENDER
Cynthia Carter, Cardiff University, UK
Linda Steiner (eds), Rutgers University, New Jersey, USA
2004 / 384 pages
ISBN: 9780335210978 (Paperback)
A lively and engaging introduction to the eld of media and gender
research, drawing from a wide range of important international
scholarship.
ICMS Series
CRI TI CAL READI NGS: MEDI A AND
AUDI ENCES
Virginia Nightingale, University of Western Sydney, Australia
Karen Ross (eds), Conventry University, UK
2004 / 320 pages
ISBN: 9780335211661 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335211678 (Hardback)
This book brings together some of the important developments in the
history of audience and media studies and the signicant research
which has shaped the eld until now. This collection of essays provides
students and lecturers in media, lm and cultural studies with a
better understanding of the rationale, ndings and forms of analysis
undertaken at different points in the elds research-based career.
ICMS Series
MEDI A AND AUDI ENCES
New Per spec t i ves
Karen Ross, Coventry University, UK
Virginia Nightingale, University of Western Sydney, Australia
2004 / 208 pages
ISBN: 9780335206919 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335206926 (Hardback)
This book looks at the various ways in which the audience as a
concept has changed and examines the relationships between
audiences, texts and technologies. A chronological as well as a
thematic approach is used to explore a wide range of topics
CRI ME AND LAW I N MEDI A CULTURE
Sheila Brown
2003 / 240 pages
ISBN: 9780335205486 (Paperback)
Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
28
ICMS Series
MORAL PANI CS AND THE MEDI A
Chas Critcher
2003 / 224 pages
ISBN: 9780335209088 (Paperback)
ICMS Series
MASCULI NI TI ES AND CULTURE
John Beynon
2002 / 208 pages
ISBN: 9780335199884 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335199891 (Hardback)
ICMS Series
COMPASSI ON, MORALI TY AND THE MEDI A
Keith Tester
2001 / 160 pages
ISBN: 9780335205134 (Paperback)
ICMS Series
ETHNI C MI NORI TI ES AND THE MEDI A
Simon Cottle (Ed)
2000 / 264 pages
ISBN: 9780335202706 (Paperback)
Spor t s St udi es
SPORT AND SOCI ETY
Graham Scambler
2005 / 240 pages
ISBN: 9780335210701 (Paperback)
ICMS Series
SPORT CULTURE AND THE MEDI A
2nd Edi t i on
David Rowe
2004 / 272 pages
ISBN: 9780335210756 (Paperback)
ICMS Series
CRI TI CAL READI NGS: SPORT, CULTURE
AND THE MEDI A
David Rowe (Ed)
2003 / 384 pages
ISBN: 9780335211500 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335211517 (Hardback)
Jour nal i sm
Bestseller
NEWS CULTURE
3r d Edi t i on
Stuart Allan, University of the West of England, UK
2011 (March 2010) / 294 pages
ISBN: 9780335235650 (Paperback)
News Culture is an introduction to the forms, practices, institutions
and audiences of journalism. It begins with a historical consideration
of the rise of objective reporting in newspaper, radio and televisual
journalism. It explores the way news is produced, its textual
conventions, and its negotiation by the reader, listener or viewer
as part of everyday life. Fully updated, key features of this edition
include:
An expanded introduction to signal a fresh approach to the v
subject
A new chapter examining the new and the public sphere, including v
news on the internet and coverage of the political economy
Expanded discussion of online news interwoven throughout v
the book
Updated research, references, examples and illustration from v
national contexts other than the UK and the US, including Australia,
Canada and others from the non-western world.
Inclusion of specialist topics such as; radio journalism; citizen v
journalism; visual culture of journalism; sports reporting and global
news culture.
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Webs|te: http:JJwww.mheducot|on.os|oJpub||shJ
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29
Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
KEYWORDS I N NEWS AND J OURNALI SM
STUDI ES
Barbie Zelizer and Stuart Allan, Bournemouth University
2011 (July 2010) / 280 pages
ISBN: 9780335221837 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335221844 (Hardback)
This comprehensive glossary offers clear and insightful denitions of
the most signicant keywords in news and journalism studies. Ranging
from above the fold to zinger, and with over 400 terms in between, it
covers words associated with newspapers, radio and television news,
magazines, photojournalism and internet reporting. Other examples
include agenda setting, libel, news values, objectivity, scoop and
tabloidization. Written by two of the elds leading scholars, it offers
an informed perspective on the key terms. It considers a range of
genres, including business, crime, environmental, fashion, lifestyle,
investigative, science, sports and war journalism as well as looking
at new alternatives such as Wikinews and Twitter. This lively and
engaging treatment will provide students, researchers and journalists
with a solid grounding in the fast-moving vocabulary of news and
journalism studies.
CONTENTS
Ranging from above the fold to zinger, and with over 400 terms
in between, it covers words associated with newspapers, radio and
television news, magazines, photojournalism and internet reporting.
Other examples include agenda setting, libel, news values,
objectivity, scoop and tabloidization.
ICMS Series
GLOBAL CRI SI S REPORTI NG
Simon Cottle, Cardiff University, UK
2008 / 208 pages
ISBN: 9780335221387 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335221394 (Hardback)
This book examines the medias involvement in some of the
most humanly pressing global crises of our time. Drawing on
original research and key scholarship in the elds of media and
communications and journalism studies, it seeks to throw light on the
dark side of global society as well as the medias capacity to sustain
emergent forms of global awareness, global citizenship and even,
perhaps, a global cosmopolitan outlook.
CONTENTS
Global crisis, what crisis?
J ournalism in the global age
Disasters: From the Calculus of Death to Mediatized Rituals
Ecology and climate change: From silence and sceptics to spectacle
and
Forced migrations and human rights: Antinomies in the mediated
ethics of care
The Global War on Terror and new(s) wars: On vicarious, visceral
violence
The CNN effect and compassion fatigue: Moving beyond
commonsense
Humanitarianism and the changing aid-media field: Everyone was
dying for coverage
Global crisis reporting
Conclusions
THE BRI TI SH PRESS
Michael Temple, University of Staffordshire, UK
2008 / 232 pages
ISBN: 9780335222971 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335222988 (Hardback)
This new book offers a practical introduction to the history, theory,
politics and potential future of British newspapers. The rst half of
the book leads the reader through key historical moments from the
Civil War to Wapping and beyond, while the second half takes an
in-depth look at current empirical and theoretical concerns. It argues
that throughout their history our newspapers have been vital conduits
for public opinion and, on occasion, catalysts for social change.
UNDERSTANDI NG THE LOCAL MEDI A
Meryl Aldridge, University of Nottingham, UK
2007 / 208 pages
ISBN: 9780335221721 (Paperback)
Most adults in the UK read a local newspaper; regional news bulletins
are among the mostwatched on television; and local radio has a
loyal following. Even though the majority of political and economic
decisions affecting daily life are taken far away and are shaped by
global processes, their impact is experienced locally. But despite being
both popular and politically important, local media are often overlooked
on media-related courses and in discussions of the role of the media
in contemporary society. Understanding the Local Media addresses
this gap by explaining how regional newspapers and broadcast news
are owned, regulated and organized; how these factors produce the
outputs we see and hear; what we know of audiences attitude to
them; and discusses local media as places of work.
ONLI NE NEWS Bestseller
Jour nal i sm and t he I nt er net
Stuart Allan, Bournemouth University, UK
2006 / 216 pages
ISBN: 9780335221219 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335221226 (Hardback)
Perhaps most ground-breaking are Allans textured dissections of
developments in participatory journalism and citizen journalistsin the
digital age. This book is a must-read. John V. Pavlik, Rutgers, The State
University of New Jersey, USA
In this exciting and timely book Stuart Allan provides a wide-ranging
analysis of online news. He offers important insights into the key
debates concerning the ways in which journalism is evolving on the
Internet, devoting particular attention to the factors inuencing its
development.
Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
30
J OURNALI SM
Bestseller
Cr i t i c al I ssues
Stuart Allan (ed), Bournemouth University, UK
2005 / 408 pages
ISBN: 9780335214754 (Paperback)
This book explores essential themes in news and journalism studies.
Written in a lively manner designed to invite discussion by identifying
key questions around a critical issue, each chapter assesses where
journalism is today, its strengths and its challenges, and highlights
ways to improve upon it for tomorrow.
Sc i enc e & Cul t ur e
ICMS Series
UNDERSTANDI NG POPULAR SCI ENCE
Peter Broks, University of the West of England, Bristol, UK
2006 / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335215485 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335215492 (Hardback)
This book provides a framework to help understand the development
of popular science and current debates about it. In a lively and
accessible style, Peter Broks shows how popular science has been
invented, redened and fought over. From early nineteenth century
radical science to twenty-rst century government initiatives, he
examines popular science as an arena where the authority of science
and the authority of the state are legitimized and challenged. The
book includes accounts of the public perception of scientists, visions
of the future, fears of an anti-science movement and concerns
about scientic literacy. The nal chapter proposes a new model for
understanding the interaction between lay and expert knowledge. It
is essential reading for students in cultural studies, science studies,
history of science and science communication.
ICMS Series
SCI ENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND CULTURE
David Bell, University of Leeds, UK
2005 / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335213269 (Paperback)
What does a cultural studies approach bring to the study of science
and technology?
This book introduces students to cultural studies of science and
technology. It equips readers with an understanding of science
and technology as aspects of culture, and an appreciation of the
importance of thinking about science and technology from a cultural
studies perspective. Individual chapters focus on topics including
popular representations of science and scientists, the place of science
and technology in everyday life, and the contests over amateur,
fringe and pseudo-science. Each chapter includes case studies
ranging from the MMR vaccine to UFOs, and from nuclear war to
microwave ovens.
ICMS Series
MEDI A, RI SK AND SCI ENCE
Stuart Allan, Bournemouth University, UK
2002 / 256 pages
ISBN: 9780335206629 (Paperback)
An exciting exploration of key debates on how the media represent
science and risk. Themes include:
The role of science in science fiction, such as Star Trek and v
The X Files
How the news media portray risks, threats and hazards v
News coverage of the environment, HIV/Aids, food scares and v
human cloning
A highly topical text for cultural and media studies, science v
studies, journalism, sociology and politics.
Cul t ur al St udi es
ICMS Series
DOMESTI C CULTURES
Joanne Hollows, Nottingham Trent University, UK
2008 / 208 pages
ISBN: 9780335222537 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335222544 (Hardback)
This accessible, student-friendly and interdisciplinary introduction to
domestic cultures surveys and synthesizes a range of approaches
to demonstrate why home is central to media and cultural studies.
J oanne Hollows challenges a range of ideas about domestic culture.
She examines how the meanings of domestic life are produced across
a range of discourses and practices, from architecture, lifestyle
media and advertising to home decoration, cooking and watching
television. Hollows argues that while the values associated with
domestic cultures are often seen as the opposite of those associated
with the public sphere, this opposition between public and private is
never clear-cut.
RADI CAL CONSUMPTI ON I N
CONTEMPORARY CULTURE
Jo Littler, Middlesex University, UK
2008 / 208 pages
ISBN: 9780335221523 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335221530 (Hardback)
The increasingly conspicuous problems of contemporary consumerism,
namely social exploitation and environmental destruction, has led to
an increase in alternative consumer practices. Fair trade, consumer
protests, brand backlashes, green goods and boycotts have all become
almost mainstream. This book suggests that we can understand this
phenomenon as an expanding eld of radical consumption, in which
we are increasingly encouraged to shop for change. By examining
their practices, precedents and politics, the book asks: just how
radical are these forms of radical consumption? J o Littler takes
an interdisciplinary approach to examining contemporary radical
consumption, analysing its possibilities and problems, methods
of mediation and its connections to wider cultural formations of
production and politics.
31
Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
KEY I SSUES I N CRI TI CAL AND CULTURAL
THEORY
Kate McGowan, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK
2007 / 224 pages
ISBN: 9780335218035 (Paperback)
Kate McGowan addresses the questions of cultural meaning and value
which confront us all today. The book explores the often complex
paradigms of critical thinking and discusses the possibilities of
engaging and critiquing the cultural values that relate to our present.
Dealing directly with the issues entailed in cultural analysis, the book
avoids simply looking at the eminent authors or movements in critical
and cultural theory, and instead focuses on why studying culture
matters to us today.
CRI TI CAL THEORI ES OF MASS CULTURE
Then and Now
Paul A. Taylor, University of Leeds
Jan Ll. Harris, independent scholar, UK
2007 / 256 pages
ISBN: 9780335218110 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335218127 (Hardback)
This textbook revisits the work of leading critical theorists, explores
and explains their work and highlights their thinking in regard to
present day issues of mass culture. It:
Responds directly to the criticisms of mass culture raised by v
key writers
Traces and evaluates the development of work by new v
thinkers
Reassesses mass culture theories in the changed circumstances v
of today
Each initial chapter introduces the work of a key critical theorist, such
as Benjamin, Kracauer or Marcuse. The alternate chapters introduce
a corresponding contemporary theme and writer, explaining how the
original work can be considered today, the relevance it has for todays
theorists and how the successors have developed this thinking. This is
a key text for students of cultural studies and sociology which shows
that critical theory is needed now just as much as it was then.
ICMS Series
PERSPECTI VES ON GLOBAL CULTURES
Ramaswami Harindranath, University of Melbourne, Australia
2006 / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335205691 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335205707 (Hardback)
This book explores signicant aspects of the cultural and social impact
of globalization on the developing world by examining intellectual
contributions and cultural expression in Latin America, Africa, and
South and South East Asia. It surveys key debates on the politics
of representation and cultural difference, paying particular attention
to issues such as subalternity, cultural nationalism, third cinema,
multiculturalism, and indigenous communities. It offers an original
synthesis of ideas on these topics, and traces the lines of connection
between national cultural and political projects during anti-colonial
struggles and more contemporary forms of national and transnational
cinema and television.
ICMS Series
MODERNI TY AND POSTMODERN CULTURE
2nd Edi t i on
Jim McGuigan, Loughborough University, UK
2006 / 160 pages
ISBN: 9780335219216 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335219223 (Hardback)
Modernity and Postmodern Culture critically assesses claims
made about the postmodernization of culture and society. The
author argues that although culture may be postmodern in terms
of art, entertainment and everyday life, modernity still exists and is
pervasive. This new edition is updated throughout using new case
studies and examples, to review the effects of postmodernism, update
the literature and look at international events through a modernist/
postmodernist gaze.
ICMS Series
ORDI NARY LI FESTYLES
Popul ar Medi a, Consumpt i on and Tast e
David Bell, University of Leeds
Joanne Hollows (eds), Nottingham Trent University, UK
2005 / 224 pages
ISBN: 9780335215508 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335215515 (Hardback)
Lifestyle media books, magazines and television shows that focus
on topics such as cookery, gardening and travel have witnessed
an explosion in recent years. Ordinary Lifestyles explores how these
media texts bring ideas about taste and fashion to consumers,
helping audiences to fashion their lifestyles as well as dening what
constitutes an appropriate lifestyle for particular social formations.
The book shows that watching make-over television or cooking from
a celebrity chefs book are signicant cultural practices, through which
we work on our ideas about taste, status and identity.
ICMS Series
MUSEUMS, MEDI A AND CULTURAL
THEORY
Michele Henning, University of the West of England, Bristol, UK
2005 / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335214198 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335214204 (Hardback)
This original book explores how historical and contemporary museums
and exhibitions restage the relationship between people and material
things. It is unique in its treatment of the museum as a media-form,
and in its detailed and critical discussion of a wide range of display
techniques. It provides an indispensable introduction to some of the
key ideas, texts and histories relevant to the museum in the 21st
century.
Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
32
MATERI ALI TY AND SOCI ETY
Tim Dant, University of East Anglia, UK
2004 / 184 pages
ISBN: 9780335208555 (Paperback)
This book examines the relationships between society and material
culture: the interaction between people and things. Using the motor car
as a recurring theme, he shows how we confront our society through
material interaction with the objects that surround us.
CHI LLI NG OUT
The Cul t ur al Pol i t i c s of Subst anc e
Consumpt i on, Yout h and Dr ug Pol i c y
Shane J. Blackman, Canterbury Christ Church University College, UK
2004 / 240 pages
ISBN: 9780335200726 (Paperback)
This book provides a critical map of drugs, including work on drugs as
cultural commodities in lm, popular music, advertising and tourism,
and work on drug normalisation, subcultural deviance and the politics
of drug education.
ICMS Series
CULTURE ON DI SPLAY
The Pr oduc t i on of Cont empor ar y
Vi si t abi l i t y
Bella Dicks, Cardiff University, UK
2004 / 248 pages
ISBN: 9780335206575 (Paperback)
Discussed in a lively and accessible manner, this book offers fresh
ways of thinking about tourism, leisure and heritage.
A CRI TI CAL AND CULTURAL Bestseller
Theor y Reader 2/e
Antony Easthope, Late of Manchester Metropolitan University
Kate McGowan (eds), Manchester Metropolitan University, UK
2004 / 304 pages
ISBN: 9780335213559 (Paperback)
The Critical and Cultural Theory Reader is an introduction to key
readings in cultural theory which guides students through the tradition
of thought. The second and expanded edition of this highly successful
Reader reects the growing diversity of the eld. Divided into six
thematic sections: Semiology; Ideology; Subjectivity; Difference;
Gender and Race, and Postmodernism, the Reader features an
editors introduction to the volume, introductions to each of the
thematic sections as well as invaluable summaries of each of the
extracts.
ICMS Series
RETHI NKI NG CULTURAL POLI CY
Jim McGuigan, Loughborough University, UK
2004 / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335207015 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335207022 (Hardback)
This is a distinctive and independent analysis of cultural policy. The
ideal introduction to contemporary cultural policy for culture and
media studies, sociology of culture, politics, arts administration and
cultural management.
RACE, ETHNI CI TY AND DI FFERENCE
Peter Ratcliffe
2004 / 208 pages
ISBN: 9780335210954 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335210961 (Hardback)
ICMS Series
I DENTI TY AND CULTURE
Nar r at i ves of Di f f er enc e and Bel ongi ng
Chris Weedon, Cardiff University, UK
2004 / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335200863 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335200870 (Hardback)
This book looks at how different cultural narratives and practices
work to constitute identity for individuals and groups in multi-ethnic,
postcolonial societies. The book encompasses issues of class, race,
and gender, with a particular focus on the mobilization of forms of
ethnic identity in societies still governed by racism.
PHI LOSOPHI ES OF SOCI AL SCI ENCE
Gerard Delanty and Piet Strydom (eds)
2003 / 496 pages
ISBN: 9780335208845 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335208852 (Hardback)
ICMS Series
CI TI ES AND URBAN CULTURES
Deborah Stevenson
2003 / 192 pages
ISBN: 9780335208449 (Paperback)
33
Medi a, Fi l m & Cul t ur al St udi es
ICMS Series
CULTURAL CI TI ZENSHI P: COSMOPOLI TAN
QUESTI ONS
Nick Stevenson
2003 /192 pages
ISBN: 9780335208784 (Paperback)
MATERI AL CULTURE I N THE SOCI AL
WORLD
Tim Dant
1999 / 240 pages
ISBN: 9780335198214 (Paperback)
Popul ar Musi c
ACCESS ALL ERAS
Tr i but e Bands and Gl obal Pop Cul t ur e
Shane Homan (ed), University of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia
2006 / 272 pages
ISBN: 9780335216901 (Paperback)
ISBN: 9780335216918 (Hardback)
This books explores the cultural signicance and importance of the
tribute band phenomenon. Using case studies from the US, UK,
Northern Europe, Australia and other countries, and looking at artists
such as The Bootleg Beatles, NoWaySis, Bjorn Again, Elvis: The
Concert and Shanias Twin, the book looks at core popular studies
music debates including identity, celebrity and fandom, intertextuality,
authenticity, media technology, ownership and copyright.
CULTURES OF POPULAR MUSI C
Andy Bennett
2002 / 208 pages
ISBN: 9780335202508 (Paperback)
STUDYI NG POPULAR MUSI C
Richard Middleton
1990
ISBN: 9780335152759 (Paperback)
TI TLE I NDEX
34
A
Access All Eras: Tribute Bands and Global Pop Culture Homan 33
Analysing Media Texts (With DVD) Gillespie 26
Animation Producers Handbook, The Milic 21
Annual Editions: Mass Media 11/12, 17e Gorham 14
Annual Editions: Mass Media 12/13, 18e Gorham 14
Art of Public Speaking, The, 11e Lucas 1
B
Bollywood Reader, The Dudrah 21
Bridges Not Walls: A Book About Interpersonal Communication, 11e Stewart 4
British Press, The Temple 29
Broadcast News Handbook, 4e Tuggle 17
Broadcasting Cable the Internet and Beyond: An Introduction to Dominick 15
Modern Electronic Media, 7e
C
Children, Media and Culture Davies 24
Chilling Out: The Cultural Politics of Substance Consumption, Youth and Drug Policy Blackman 32
Cinema and Cultural Modernity Branston 22
Cinema Entertainment: Essays on Audiences, Films and Film Makers Lovell 20
Cities and Urban Cultures Stevenson 32
Citizens Or Consumers? The Media and the Decline of Political Participation Lewis 27
Communicating at Work Principles and Practices for Business and the Professions, 10e Adler 7
Communicating in Groups Applications and Skills, 8e Adams 5
Communication Matters Floyd 3
Communication Research Asking Questions, Finding Answers, 3e Keyton 9
Communication Theories: Perspectives, Processes and Contexts, 2e Miller 9
Communication Works, 10e Gamble 3
Communication Works, 11e Gamble 2
Compassion, Morality and the Media Tester 28
Contemporary American Cinema Ruth 21
Crime and Law in Media Culture Brown 27
Critical and Cultural: Theory Reader, A, 2e Easthope 32
Critical Readings: Media and Audiences Nightingale 27
Critical Readings: Media and Gender Carter 27
Critical Readings: Moral Panics and the Media Critcher 26
Critical Readings: Sport, Culture and the Media Rowe 28
Critical Readings: Violence and the Media Weaver 26
Critical Theories of Mass Culture: Then and Now Taylor 31
Cult Film Reader, The Mathijs 21
35
TI TLE I NDEX
Cultural Citizenship: Cosmopolitan Questions Stevenson 33
Culture on Display: The Production of Contemporary Visitability Dicks 32
Cultures of Popular Music Bennett 33
D
Digital Culture: Understanding New Media Creebe 22
Domestic Cultures Hollows 30
Domestication of Media and Technology Berker 23
Dynamics of Mass Communication: Media in Transition, 11e Dominick 13
Dynamics of Mass Communication: Media in Transition, 12e Dominick 11
E
Electronic Media: An Introduction, 10e Gross 16
Ethnic Minorities and the Media Cottle 28
Experiencing Intercultural Communication: An Introduction, 4e Martin 10
F
Feminist Television Criticism, 2e Brunsdon 21
First Look at Communication Theory, A, 8e Griffin 8
G
Game Cultures: Computer Games as New Media Dovey 23
Global Crisis Reporting Cottle 29
H
Human Communication, 4e Pearson 3
Human Communication: Principles and Contexts, 13e Tubbs 2
I
Identity and Culture: Narratives of Difference and Belonging Weedon 32
Inside Reporting, 3e Harrower 17
Interpersonal Communication, 2e Floyd 4
Interpersonal Conflict, 8e Wilmot 5
Interviewing: Principles and Practices, 13e Stewart 7
Introducing Communication Theory: Analysis and Application, 4e West 9
Introduction To Mass Communication: Media Literacy and Culture, 7e Baran 11
iSpeak: Public Speaking for Contemporary Life: 2011 Edition, 5e Nelson 2
ITV Cultures: Independent Television Over Fifty Years J ohnson 22
TI TLE I NDEX
36
J
J ournalism: Critical Issues Allan 30
K
Key Issues in Critical and Cultural Theory McGowan 31
Key Themes in Interpersonal Communication Hill 25
Key Themes In Media Theory Laughey 26
Keywords in News and J ournalism Studies Zelizer 29
M
Masculinities and Culture Beynon 28
Mass Media in a Changing World, 4e Rodman 12
Material Culture in the Social World Dant 33
Materiality and Society Dant 32
Media and Audiences: New Perspectives Ross 27
Media and Society, 2e Burton 24
Media and Their Publics, The Higgins 25
Media Audiences Gillespie 26
Media Discourses: Analysing Media Texts Matheson 27
Media in Italy, The Hibberd 25
Media in Latin America, The Lugo-Ocando 25
Media in Russia, The Arutunyan 25
Media Production Hesmondhalgh 27
Media Talk: Conversation Analysis and the Study of Broadcasting Hutchby 27
Media Technology: Critical Perspectives Van Loon 23
Media Writers Handbook: A Guide to Common Writing and Editing Problems, 6e Arnold 16, 17
Media, Politics and the Network Society Hassan 23
Media, Risk and Science Allan 30
Mediating Politics: Newspapers, Radio, Television and the Internet Washbourne 24
Mediatized Conflict Cottle 26
Melvin Menchers News Reporting and Writing, 12e Mencher 17
Mobile and Wireless Communications: An Introduction Gow 23
Modernity and Postmodern Culture, 2e Mcguigan 31
Moral Panics and the Media Critcher 28
Movie Business Book, The, 3e Squire 21
Museums, Media and Cultural Theory Henning 31
37
TI TLE I NDEX
N
New Literacies, 3e Lankshear 22
New Media Theory Reader, The Hassan 23
News Culture, 3e Allan 28
News Writing and Reporting for Todays Media, 7e Itule 18
Newspaper Designers Handbook, The, 7e Harrower 18
O
Online News: J ournalism and the Internet Allan 29
Ordinary Lifestyles: Popular Media, Consumption and Taste Bell 31
P
Perspectives on Global Cultures Harindranath 31
Philosophies of Social Science Delanty 32
Public Relations Writing: The Essentials of Style and Format, 6e Bivins 19
Public Relations: The Profession and the Practice, 4e Lattimore 18
R
Race, Ethnicity and Difference Ratcliffe 32
Radical Consumption in Contemporary Culture Littler 30
Rethinking Cultural Policy McGuigan 32
Rethinking Documentary: New Perspectives and Practices Austin 20
S
Science, Technology and Culture Bell 30
Seeing is Believing, 4e Berger 6
Sport and Society Scambler 28
Sport Culture and the Media, 2e Rowe 28
Studying Popular Music Middleton 33
Systems Approach to Small Group Interaction, A, 11e Tubbs 6
T
Tabloid Culture Reader, The Biressi 25
Taking Sides: Clashing Views in Gender, 5e White 10
Taking Sides: Clashing Views in Mass Media and Society Expanded, 11e Alexander 14
Taking Sides: Clashing Views in Mass Media and Society, 12e Alexander 13
Television and Sexuality: Regulation and the Politics of Taste Arthurs 22
Television, Globalization and Cultural Identities Barker 22
TI TLE I NDEX
38
U
Understanding Alternative Media Bailey 25
Understanding Media: Inside Celebrity Evans 26
Understanding Popular Science Broks 30
Understanding the Local Media Aldridge 29
Using Visual Evidence Howells 20
W
What is Film Theory? Rushton 20
39
AUTHOR I NDEX
A
Adams Communicating in Groups Applications and Skills, 8e 5
Adler Communicating at Work Principles and Practices for Business and the Professions, 10e 7
Aldridge Understanding the Local Media 29
Alexander Taking Sides: Clashing Views in Mass Media and Society Expanded, 11e 14
Alexander Taking Sides: Clashing Views in Mass Media and Society, 12e 13
Allan J ournalism: Critical Issues 30
Allan Media, Risk and Science 30
Allan News Culture, 3e 28
Allan Online News: J ournalism and the Internet 29
Arnold Media Writers Handbook: A Guide to Common Writing and Editing Problems, 6e 16, 17
Arthurs Television and Sexuality: Regulation and the Politics of Taste 22
Arutunyan Media in Russia, The 25
Austin Rethinking Documentary: New Perspectives and Practices 20
B
Bailey Understanding Alternative Media 25
Baran Introduction To Mass Communication: Media Literacy and Culture, 7e 11
Barker Television, Globalization and Cultural Identities 22
Bell Ordinary Lifestyles: Popular Media, Consumption and Taste 31
Bell Science, Technology and Culture 30
Bennett Cultures of Popular Music 33
Berger Seeing is Believing, 4e 6
Berker Domestication of Media and Technology 23
Beynon Masculinities and Culture 28
Biressi Tabloid Culture Reader, The 25
Bivins Public Relations Writing: The Essentials of Style and Format, 6e 19
Blackman Chilling Out: The Cultural Politics of Substance Consumption, Youth and Drug Policy 32
Branston Cinema and Cultural Modernity 22
Broks Understanding Popular Science 30
Brown Crime and Law in Media Culture 27
Brunsdon Feminist Television Criticism, 2e 21
Burton Media and Society, 2e 24
C
Carter Critical Readings: Media and Gender 27
Cottle Ethnic Minorities and the Media 28
Cottle Global Crisis Reporting 29
Cottle Mediatized Conflict 26
Creebe Digital Culture: Understanding New Media 22
Critcher Critical Readings: Moral Panics and the Media 26
Critcher Moral Panics and the Media 28
AUTHOR I NDEX
40
D
Dant Material Culture in the Social World 33
Dant Materiality and Society 32
Davies Children, Media and Culture 24
Delanty Philosophies of Social Science 32
Dicks Culture on Display: The Production of Contemporary Visitability 32
Dominick Broadcasting Cable the Internet and Beyond: An Introduction to 15
Modern Electronic Media, 7e
Dominick Dynamics of Mass Communication: Media in Transition, 11e 13
Dominick Dynamics of Mass Communication: Media in Transition, 12e 11
Dovey Game Cultures: Computer Games as New Media 23
Dudrah Bollywood Reader, The 21
E
Easthope Critical and Cultural: Theory Reader, A, 2e 32
Evans Understanding Media: Inside Celebrity 26
F
Floyd Communication Matters 3
Floyd Interpersonal Communication, 2e 4
G
Gamble Communication Works, 10e 3
Gamble Communication Works, 11e 2
Gillespie Analysing Media Texts (With DVD) 26
Gillespie Media Audiences 26
Gorham Annual Editions: Mass Media 11/12, 17e 14
Gorham Annual Editions: Mass Media 12/13, 18e 14
Gow Mobile and Wireless Communications: An Introduction 23
Griffin First Look at Communication Theory, A, 8e 8
Gross Electronic Media: An Introduction, 10e 16
H
Harindranath Perspectives on Global Cultures 31
Harrower Inside Reporting, 3e 17
Harrower Newspaper Designers Handbook, The, 7e 18
Hassan Media, Politics and the Network Society 23
Hassan New Media Theory Reader, The 23
Henning Museums, Media and Cultural Theory 31
Hesmondhalgh Media Production 27
41
AUTHOR I NDEX
Hibberd Media in Italy, The 25
Higgins Media and Their Publics, The 25
Hill Key Themes in Interpersonal Communication 25
Hollows Domestic Cultures 30
Homan Access All Eras: Tribute Bands and Global Pop Culture 33
Howells Using Visual Evidence 20
Hutchby Media Talk: Conversation Analysis and the Study of Broadcasting 27
I
Itule News Writing and Reporting for Todays Media, 7e 18
J
J ohnson ITV Cultures: Independent Television Over Fifty Years 22
K
Keyton Communication Research Asking Questions, Finding Answers, 3e 9
L
Lankshear New Literacies, 3e 22
Lattimore Public Relations: The Profession and the Practice, 4e 18
Laughey Key Themes In Media Theory 26
Lewis Citizens Or Consumers? The Media and the Decline of Political Participation 27
Littler Radical Consumption in Contemporary Culture 30
Lovell Cinema Entertainment: Essays on Audiences, Films and Film Makers 20
Lucas Art of Public Speaking, The, 11e 1
Lugo-Ocando Media in Latin America, The 25
M
Martin Experiencing Intercultural Communication: An Introduction, 4e 10
Matheson Media Discourses: Analysing Media Texts 27
Mathijs Cult Film Reader, The 21
McGowan Key Issues in Critical and Cultural Theory 31
McGuigan Modernity and Postmodern Culture, 2e 31
McGuigan Rethinking Cultural Policy 32
Mencher Melvin Menchers News Reporting and Writing, 12e 17
Middleton Studying Popular Music 33
Milic Animation Producers Handbook, The 21
Miller Communication Theories: Perspectives, Processes and Contexts, 2e 9
AUTHOR I NDEX
42
N
Nelson iSpeak: Public Speaking for Contemporary Life: 2011 Edition, 5e 2
Nightingale Critical Readings: Media and Audiences 27
P
Pearson Human Communication, 4e 3
R
Ratcliffe Race, Ethnicity and Difference 32
Rodman Mass Media in a Changing World, 4e 12
Ross Media and Audiences: New Perspectives 27
Rowe Critical Readings: Sport, Culture and the Media 28
Rowe Sport Culture and the Media, 2e 28
Rushton What is Film Theory? 20
Ruth Contemporary American Cinema 21
S
Scambler Sport and Society 28
Squire Movie Business Book, The, 3e 21
Stevenson Cities and Urban Cultures 32
Stevenson Cultural Citizenship: Cosmopolitan Questions 33
Stewart Bridges Not Walls: A Book About Interpersonal Communication, 11e 4
Stewart Interviewing: Principles and Practices, 13e 7
T
Taylor Critical Theories of Mass Culture: Then and Now 31
Temple British Press, The 29
Tester Compassion, Morality and the Media 28
Tubbs Human Communication: Principles and Contexts, 13e 2
Tubbs Systems Approach to Small Group Interaction, A, 11e 6
Tuggle Broadcast News Handbook, 4e 17
V
Van Loon Media Technology: Critical Perspectives 23
43
AUTHOR I NDEX
W
Washbourne Mediating Politics: Newspapers, Radio, Television and the Internet 24
Weaver Critical Readings: Violence and the Media 26
Weedon Identity and Culture: Narratives of Difference and Belonging 32
West Introducing Communication Theory: Analysis and Application, 4e 9
White Taking Sides: Clashing Views in Gender, 5e 10
Wilmot Interpersonal Conflict, 8e 5
Z
Zelizer Keywords in News and J ournalism Studies 29
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theIr coursework when, where and however they learn best.
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We provIde the learnIng resources students need to connect
success In the classroom wIth success In the world that awaIts.
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