Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 288
Trim: 5¾ x 9
978-0-7425-1940-4 • Paperback • August 2002 • $61.00 • (£47.00)
Daniel W. Rossides is professor of sociology emeritus, Bowdoin College. He has also taught at Hunter College, CUNY, and York University, Toronto. He has published books on social theory, social stratification, and the professions and disciplines, as well as articles on education for Change and The Journal of Higher Education. He is currently working on a manuscript titled Understanding American Capitalism.
Part 1 Part I. Kind of Society and Kind of Communication
Chapter 2 Chapter 1. Communication and Types of Power Structure in the Premodern World
Chapter 3 Chapter 2. Communication and the Rise of Capitalism, 1100-1800
Chapter 4 Chapter 3. Communication, Media and the Emergence of Corporate Capitalism in the United States, 1800-1940
Part 5 Part II. Communication, Media, and Contemporary American Society
Chapter 6 Chapter 4. Computer Communication and the the Emergence of Corporate World-Market Capitalism after 1940
Chapter 7 Chapter 5. Communication, Media, and the American Polity
Chapter 8 Chapter 6. Communication, Media, and the American City
Chapter 9 Chapter 7. Journalism, Policy Science, Policy Groups, and Foundations: Undermining the Public and Contracting the Public Sphere
Chapter 10 Chapter 8. Communication, Media, and Popular Culture
Chapter 11 Chapter 9. Communication and Media Problems: The Need to Ask Foundational Questions
The advantages of this book are the provocative questions raised, historical perspective, wide range, and macrosociological lens. Whether or not readers agree with it, many should find it stimulating.
— Contemporary Sociology
This book is unmatched among communication texts for the breadth of its historical coverage, the depth of its sociological analysis, and for its thorough and unflinching examination of how power shapes communication practices and institutions.
— Vincent Mosco, Canada Research Chair in Communication and Society, Queen's University
· Provides an in-depth picture of American society as a system of power.
· Uses an interpretive, critical sociology grounded in European liberalism (Durkheim, Weber) and European socialism (democratic Marxism, Fabianism).
· Emphasizes that power relations must be changed in order to significantly reform communication and American society.
· Accessible to undergraduates and the general reader. Basic and sub-themes are carried across chapters and restated in terms of new subject matter, frequent cross references, avoidance of abstract discussions devoid of concrete details, definitions of important concepts, and both summaries and alerts as to upcoming materials.