Media Studies Journal 1999 - Abstracts

Media Studies Journal 1999
TitleSubjectAuthors
"1968.".(includes reply)(response to article by journalist/author Andrew Tyndall, Media Studies Journal, fall 1998 issue)Mass communicationsFouhy, Edward
A fatal error: the press conference that opened the Berlin Wall.Mass communicationsTusa, Ann
An enormously difficult task.(Covering China )(obtaining hard statistical data on business in China)Mass communicationsBranathan, Joyce
A taste of freedom in Russia: journalism between the past and the future.Mass communicationsAzhgikhina, Nadezhda
A Web of sound: the fruitful convergence of radio, audio and the Internet.Mass communicationsDonow, Kenneth R., Miles, Peggy
B92 of Belgrade: free voices on the airwaves and the Internet.Mass communicationsPantic, Drazen
Beyond the square.(Covering China )(1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre, Beijing, China)Mass communicationsWakeman, Carolyn
Business news and international reporting.Mass communicationsLambert, Richard
Business reporting in Eastern Europe: new markets, new journalism.Mass communicationsNelson, Mark M.
Charting new terrain.(Covering China )(women's problems in China, early 1998)Mass communicationsLin, Jennifer
China from here and there.(Covering China )Mass communicationsChang, Tsan-Kuo
Chinese media in flux: from Party line to bottom line.(Covering China )Mass communicationsFlorCruz, Jaime A.
Civil society and the spirit of 1989: lessons for journalism, from East to West.Mass communicationsRosen, Jay
Covering the Chinese civil war.(Covering China )Mass communicationsTopping, Seymour
Desperation in Shanghai.(Covering China )(stampede at Bank of China, Shanghai, Dec 1948)Mass communicationsTopping, Audrey Ronning
Echoes of the May 4th movement.(Covering China )(civil rights protest movement beginning May 4, 1919, in China)Mass communicationsWasserstrom, Jeffrey
Eternal China?(Covering China )Mass communicationsSpence, Jonathan D.
Framing China.(Covering China )(explaining a complex country)Mass communicationsMann, James
From admiration to confrontation: six decades of American reporting about China.(Covering China )Mass communicationsFarmer, Edward L.
From hellholes with love: insurgent journalism from Poland to Pristina.(New Republic special correspondent Anna Husarska)(Interview)Mass communicationsSnyder, Robert W.
Gazeta Wyborcza at 10: the progress of Poland since communism.Mass communicationsMichnik, Adam
Gnats chasing an elephant: press criticism grounded in the public interest has yielded to media criticism that seeks consumer satisfaction.Mass communicationsBoylan, James
Guiding public opinion.(Covering China )(China's media policy)Mass communicationsQing, Dai
Hong Kong: still a window between China and the west.(Covering China )Mass communicationsChan, Ying
How I became a witch: nationalism, sexism and postcommunist journalism in Croatia.Mass communicationsDrakulic, Slavenka
Lawyers, voyeurs and vigilantes: journalists and our democratic institutions are in a dangerously deformed relationship.Mass communicationsCarey, James W.
Learning and teaching.(Covering China )(interview with journalist/scholar Orville Schell)(Interview)Mass communicationsSnyder, Robert W.
Lessons for the media from foreign aid: journalists in newly democratic countries must chart their own course.Mass communicationsHamilton, John Maxwell
Letter from the future - II: change is for the better when journalists stop seeing themselves as victims.Mass communicationsOverholser, Geneva
Letter from the future - I: journalism in 2025 isn't pretty.Mass communicationsWeise, Elizabeth
Magazines: a past in paper and a future on the Web.Mass communicationsAbrahamson, David
Missionary roots.(Covering China )(publisher Henry R. Luce)Mass communicationsBrinkley, Alan
Naked bodies, runaway ratings: TV Nova and the Czech Republic.Mass communicationsDruker, Jeremy
Network and cable TV: from electronic hearth to TV news on demand.Mass communicationsPope, Kyle
New news, new ideas: deans explore the challenges of educating the journalists of the future.(interviews with Ken Bode, David Rubin, Geoffrey Cowan, Orville Schell, Tom Goldstein, Robert Ruggles and Terry Hynes)(Interview)Mass communicationsKelley, Jennifer
Newspapers: figure out how to give readers a choice and take your eye off the quarterly earnings report.Mass communicationsBogart, Leo
New wars, new correspondents: a shrinking world demands more international news, not less.Mass communicationsSullivan, Stacy
Nixon goes to China.(Covering China )(1972 state visit to China by then president Richard M. Nixon)Mass communicationsFrankel, Max
One act, many meanings.(Covering China )(photo of Chinese citizen stepping in front of and stopping a column of Chinese army tanks, Beijing, 1989)Mass communicationsGordon, Richard
On the border of visibility: Western media and the Uyghur minority.(Covering China )Mass communicationsGladney, Dru C.
Pearl S. Buck.(Covering China )(woman author and journalist)Mass communicationsConn, Peter
Peering forward: the conduct of the news media is part of a fretful arc of apprehension that spans the 20th century.Mass communicationsDornan, Christopher
Poisonous neglect: environmental issues are undercovered in Central and Eastern Europe.Mass communicationsPrakash, Reshma
Power from the people: new media in and about East Central Europe.Mass communicationsJohnson, Owen V.
Presidential and scandalous.(Covering China )(Chinese coverage of personal news or scandals foreign political officials or celebrities)Mass communicationsCunningham, Philip J.
Radio and the fall of Communism: did BBC broadcasts make a difference?Mass communicationsTusa, John
Roma in the Hungarian media: in unstable times, images with dangerous consequences appear.Mass communicationsKerenyi, Gyorgy
Seeing past the wall: network coverage of Central and Eastern Europe since 1989.Mass communicationsTyndall, Andrew
Stars in the Gutenberg galaxy: 1989 and the Polish emigre press.Mass communicationsGross, Irena Grudzinska
Struggles for independent journalism: ten years of learning and teaching, from Poland to Yugoslavia.Mass communicationsAumente, Jerome
The bumpy road to regulation: achieving editorial freedom in broadcasting and cyberspace.Mass communicationsBrotman, Stuart N.
The future is the Net: news on-line is here to stay.Mass communicationsKatz, Jon
The genie is out of the bottle: measuring media change in Central and Eastern Europe.Mass communicationsJakubowicz, Karol
The goddess of democracy.(Covering China )(statue erected in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, China during the height of the China democracy movement in May 1989)Mass communicationsLiu, Melinda
The invisible hand.(Covering China )(free markets in China)Mass communicationsMufson, Steve
The renaissance of Jewish media: imagining and organizing a future.Mass communicationsGruber, Ruth Ellen
The 'romantic' generation.(Covering China )(reporters and reporting of Sino-US relations in the 1930s and 1940s)Mass communicationsMacKinnon, Stephen
Transforming Hungarian broadcasting: struggles for independent media.Mass communicationsMolnar, Peter
Transitions - a regional summary: a country-by-country review of the media and press freedom in former Warsaw Pact nations since 1989.Mass communicationsRubin, Joel
Uncovering Three Gorges Dam.(Covering China )(controversial mammoth hydroelectric project on the Yangtze River, China)Mass communicationsMei, Wu
Until old cats learn how to bark: Czechoslovak dissidents fought communism without learning good lessons for journalism.Mass communicationsUrban, Jan
Wall fall profits, wall fall losses: the media and German reunification.Mass communicationsRuss-Mohl, Stephan
War's most innocent victim.(Covering China )(the young)Mass communicationsYang, Daqing
What's the rush? An e-epistolary debate on the 24-hour news clock.Mass communicationsGitlin, Todd, Kansas, Dave
Who's a journalist? - I.Mass communicationsGup, Ted
Who's a journalist? - II: welcome the new journalists on the Internet.Mass communicationsGodwin, Mike
Who will be journalists in the next century?Mass communicationsWeaver, David
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