Scarecrow Press
Pages: 248
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-8108-5183-2 • Hardback • September 2005 • $105.00 • (£81.00)
Gerald S. Greenberg is Head of Information Services at The Ohio State University's Education, Human Ecology, Psychology and Social Work Library. He is the author of the previously published Tabloid Journalism: An Annotated Bibliography of English-Language Sources and Historical Encyclopedia of U.S. Independent Counsel Investigations.
Part 1 Preface
Part 2 Introduction
Chapter 3 1. Art, Architecture, and Music
Chapter 4 2. Communication in Management and Organizations
Chapter 5 3. Computer Science
Chapter 6 4. Education
Chapter 7 5. Environmental Science
Chapter 8 6. Feminism
Chapter 9 7. History
Chapter 10 8. Journalism
Chapter 11 9. Language and Linguistics
Chapter 12 10. Literature and Literary Criticism
Chapter 13 11. Mass Media
Chapter 14 12. Nursing
Chapter 15 13. Performance Studies
Chapter 16 14. Philosophy
Chapter 17 15. Political Science
Chapter 18 16. Psychology
Chapter 19 17. Social Science Theory, Cultural Studies, and Sociology
Chapter 20 18. Technology
Chapter 21 19. Writing
Part 22 Author and Editor Index
Part 23 Keyword Index
Part 24 About the Editor
The annotations give a helpful summary of the works as well as explaining the connections to communication. Greenberg includes some works that deal with poststructuralist themes without using the term 'poststructuralism,' which is especially helpful to researchers....The bibliography should prove helpful to advanced undergraduates, graduate students, and scholars interested in the implications of poststructuralism for communication.
— American Reference Books Annual
Greenberg (information services, Ohio State U. library) provides 290 entries for books, book chapters and journals that describe the impact of poststructuralist philosophy on aspects of human communication, including art, communication in management and organizations, computer science, education, history, journalism, language, literature and literary criticism, mass media, nursing, psychology, social science, technology and writing. After a brief introduction, Moore provides full citations for the entries, along with a synopsis of each sufficient to direct readers to appropriate sources. While entries do not substitute for reading the paper or book, those at the initial stages of research will find them useful for sorting out theoretical approaches.
— Reference and Research Book News