Lexington Books
Pages: 352
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0827-7 • Hardback • October 2005 • $136.00 • (£105.00)
978-0-7391-1306-6 • Paperback • September 2005 • $62.99 • (£48.00)
David Skinner is assistant professor in the Communication Studies Program at York University, Toronto. James R. Compton is assistant professor in the Faculty of Information and Media Studies at the University of Western Ontario. Mike Gasher is associate professor and graduate program director in the Department of Journalism at Concordia University, Montreal.
Chapter 1 Prologue: Has a Free Press Helped to Kill Democracy?
Chapter 2 Mapping the Threads
Chapter 3 U.S. Media Policy Then and Now
Chapter 4 So Much by So Few: Media Policy and Ownership in Canada
Chapter 5 Clear Channel:The Poster Child for Everything that's Wrong with Consolidation
Chapter 6 Aspergate: Concentration, Convergence, and Censorship in Canadian Media
Chapter 7 Hyper-Commercialism and the Media: The Threat to Journalism and Democratic Discourse
Chapter 8 News Agency Dominance in International News on the Internet
Chapter 9 Bourdieu's "Show and Hide" Paradox Reconsidered: Audience Experiences of Convergence in the Canadian Mediascape
Chapter 10 Reforming Media: Parries and Pirouettes in the U.S. Policy Process
Chapter 11 Angels of the Public Interest: U.S. Media Reform
Chapter 12 Journalism Education in the Posthistorical University
Chapter 13 The Alternative Communication Movement in Quebec's Mediascape
Chapter 14 Canadian Cyberactivism in the Cycle of Counterglobalization Struggles
Chapter 15 Turning the Tide
Converging Media, Diverging Politics brings together important research that moves beyond documenting a crucial historical period; it also bravely and actively engages a politicized vision for a news media system that could do more.
— H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online
These days people think about the news media the way they think about the weather—you can complain all you want but there is nothing you can do about it. This book confronts this view by offering a definitive study of the news media in the U.S. and Canada, from newspapers to the 'net, and documents clearly and compellingly what people are doing to challenge the power of media giants and bring about genuine media democracy.
— Vincent Mosco, Canada Research Chair in Communication and Society, Queen's University