Reflecting on more than four decades in dual scholarly careers that cut across the boundaries between communication, the sociology of culture, and journalism studies, Professor Todd Gitlin and Professor Michael Schudson discuss the growth, evolution, and strengths and weaknesses of the media studies field with Professor Jiang Chang. The three reflect on the origins of the research, the gap between the field of journalism studies and the field of sociology, the role played by journalism in the growing conflict between China and the United States, the relationship between media and political protest, and whether there ought be any cause for optimism regarding the state of democracy in the twenty-first century
Public interest in China, as reflected in the level of media attention, is burgeoning in the West an...
This contribution is written against the backdrop of the historic dispersal of early American media ...
Three very different perspectives on China and the media... from the changing nature of propaganda t...
Reflecting on more than four decades in dual scholarly careers that cut across the boundaries betwee...
Twenty-six years after the Journal of Communication published a special issue entitled “Ferment in t...
What are the relations between an academic trajectory and the research field, and how do they change...
Sociological inquiries into journalism have considered journalism as the product of cultural, econom...
Interview with Peter Golding, Emeritus Professor at Northumbria University, Visiting Professor in th...
This article examines the history of the fraught relationship between the fields of media and journa...
This contribution presents the possibilities for anthropological and neo-Marxist media within the hu...
This article examines the history of the fraught relationship between the fields of media and journa...
The past several years have seen the emergence of Chinese media studies as a subfield in communicati...
Media and Politics (2004). Hallin discusses methodological difficulties with comparative media resea...
This thesis contains ten chapters that together put forward a case for a renewed sociological approa...
In this interview, Daniel C. Hallin offers hindsight concerning his collaborative project with Paolo...
Public interest in China, as reflected in the level of media attention, is burgeoning in the West an...
This contribution is written against the backdrop of the historic dispersal of early American media ...
Three very different perspectives on China and the media... from the changing nature of propaganda t...
Reflecting on more than four decades in dual scholarly careers that cut across the boundaries betwee...
Twenty-six years after the Journal of Communication published a special issue entitled “Ferment in t...
What are the relations between an academic trajectory and the research field, and how do they change...
Sociological inquiries into journalism have considered journalism as the product of cultural, econom...
Interview with Peter Golding, Emeritus Professor at Northumbria University, Visiting Professor in th...
This article examines the history of the fraught relationship between the fields of media and journa...
This contribution presents the possibilities for anthropological and neo-Marxist media within the hu...
This article examines the history of the fraught relationship between the fields of media and journa...
The past several years have seen the emergence of Chinese media studies as a subfield in communicati...
Media and Politics (2004). Hallin discusses methodological difficulties with comparative media resea...
This thesis contains ten chapters that together put forward a case for a renewed sociological approa...
In this interview, Daniel C. Hallin offers hindsight concerning his collaborative project with Paolo...
Public interest in China, as reflected in the level of media attention, is burgeoning in the West an...
This contribution is written against the backdrop of the historic dispersal of early American media ...
Three very different perspectives on China and the media... from the changing nature of propaganda t...