
Communication in History
Technology, Culture, Society: United States Edition
Routledge (Publisher)
5th Edition
Published on 7. July 2006
Book
Paperback/Softback
368 pages
978-0-205-48388-4 (ISBN)
Unfortunately, price unknown
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Description
Communication in History's outstanding selection of readings from classic and contemporary sources gives an extensive overview of the most important ideas in the field. Encompassing topics as wide-ranging as the role of printing in the rise of the modern state and the role of the Internet in the Information Age, this anthology reveals how media have been influential both in maintaining social order and as powerful agents of change. Revised with new readings for the Fifth Edition, Communication in History continues to be, as one reviewer wrote, "the only text in the sea of History of Mass Communication texts that introduces students to a more expansive, intellectually enlivening study of the relationship between human history and communication history."
More details
Edition
5th edition
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Inc
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 178 mm
Weight
570 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-205-48388-4 (9780205483884)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
New editions

David Crowley | Paul Heyer
Communication in History
Technology, Culture, Society: International Edition
Book
07/2006
5th Edition
Pearson
€84.47
Article exhausted; check for reprint
Previous edition

David Crowley | Paul Heyer
Communication in History
Technology, Culture, and Society: United States Edition
Book
10/2002
4th Edition
Routledge
Unfortunately, price unknown
No shipping information available
Content
Forward
Preface
Part 1
1. Marshack, Art and Symbols of Ice Age Man
2. Schmandt-Besserat, The Earliest Precursor of Writing
3. Innis, Media in Ancient Empires
4. Ascher and Ascher, Civilization with Writing
5. Robinson, The Origins of Writing
Part 2
6. Drucker, The Alphabet
7. Havelock, The Greek Legacy
8. Logan, Writing and the Alphabet Effect
9. Ong, Orality, Literacy and Modern Media
10. Burke and Ornstein, Communication and Faith in the Middle Ages
Part 3
11. Carter, Paper and Block Printing - From China to Europe
12. Mumford, The Invention of Printing
13. Eisenstein, The Rise of the Reading Public
14. Graff, Early Modern Literacies
15. Thompson, The Trade in News
16. Darnton, The News in Paris: An Early Information Society
Part 4
17. Headrick, The Optical Telegraph
18. Standage, Telegraphy - The Victorian Internet
19. Schudson, The New Journalism
20. Fischer, The Telephone Takes Command
21. Marvin, Inventing the Expert
22. Carey, Time, Space and the Telegraph
Part 5
23. Keller, Early Photojournalism
24. Williams, Dream Worlds of Consumption
25. Nasaw, Talking and Singing Machines
26. Czitrom, Early Motion Pictures
27. Eyman, Movies Talk
28. Fowles, Mass Media and the Star System
29. Lears, Advertising and the Idea of Mass Society
Part 6
30. Kern, Wireless World
31. Douglas, Early Radio
32. Sterling Kitross, The Golden Age of Programming
33. Hilmes, Radio Voices
34. Fornatale and Mills, Radio in the Television Age
35. McLuhan, Understanding Radio
Part 7
36. Boddy, Television Begins
37. Carpenter, The New Languages
38. Spigel, Making Room for TV
39.Bodnoghkozy, The Sixties Counterculture on TV
40. Stephens, Television Transforms the News
41. Postman Paglia, He Wants His Book - She Wants Her TV
Part 8
42. Beniger, The Control Revolution
43. Schwartz Cowen, The Social Shape of Electronics
44. Manovich, How Media Became New
45. Abbate, Popularizing the Internet
46. O'Donnell, From the Codex Page to the Homepage
47. Bolter Grusin, The World Wide Web
Suggested Readings
Credits
Index
Preface
Part 1
1. Marshack, Art and Symbols of Ice Age Man
2. Schmandt-Besserat, The Earliest Precursor of Writing
3. Innis, Media in Ancient Empires
4. Ascher and Ascher, Civilization with Writing
5. Robinson, The Origins of Writing
Part 2
6. Drucker, The Alphabet
7. Havelock, The Greek Legacy
8. Logan, Writing and the Alphabet Effect
9. Ong, Orality, Literacy and Modern Media
10. Burke and Ornstein, Communication and Faith in the Middle Ages
Part 3
11. Carter, Paper and Block Printing - From China to Europe
12. Mumford, The Invention of Printing
13. Eisenstein, The Rise of the Reading Public
14. Graff, Early Modern Literacies
15. Thompson, The Trade in News
16. Darnton, The News in Paris: An Early Information Society
Part 4
17. Headrick, The Optical Telegraph
18. Standage, Telegraphy - The Victorian Internet
19. Schudson, The New Journalism
20. Fischer, The Telephone Takes Command
21. Marvin, Inventing the Expert
22. Carey, Time, Space and the Telegraph
Part 5
23. Keller, Early Photojournalism
24. Williams, Dream Worlds of Consumption
25. Nasaw, Talking and Singing Machines
26. Czitrom, Early Motion Pictures
27. Eyman, Movies Talk
28. Fowles, Mass Media and the Star System
29. Lears, Advertising and the Idea of Mass Society
Part 6
30. Kern, Wireless World
31. Douglas, Early Radio
32. Sterling Kitross, The Golden Age of Programming
33. Hilmes, Radio Voices
34. Fornatale and Mills, Radio in the Television Age
35. McLuhan, Understanding Radio
Part 7
36. Boddy, Television Begins
37. Carpenter, The New Languages
38. Spigel, Making Room for TV
39.Bodnoghkozy, The Sixties Counterculture on TV
40. Stephens, Television Transforms the News
41. Postman Paglia, He Wants His Book - She Wants Her TV
Part 8
42. Beniger, The Control Revolution
43. Schwartz Cowen, The Social Shape of Electronics
44. Manovich, How Media Became New
45. Abbate, Popularizing the Internet
46. O'Donnell, From the Codex Page to the Homepage
47. Bolter Grusin, The World Wide Web
Suggested Readings
Credits
Index