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Selling the air: a critique of the policy of commercial broadcasting in the United States
Thomas Streeter-
Frontmatter
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Acknowledgments (page ix)
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Introduction (page xi)
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PART ONE Liberal Television
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ONE The Fact of Television: A Theoretical Prologue (page 3)
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TWO Liberalism, Corporate Liberalism (page 22)
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THREE A Revisionist History of Broadcasting, 1900-1934 (page 59)
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PART TWO The Politics of Broadcast Policy in a Corporate Liberal State
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FOUR Inside the Beltway as an Interpretive Community: The Politics of Policy (page 113)
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FIVE Postmodern Property: Toward a New Political Economy of Broadcasting (page 163)
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PART THREE Selling the Air: Property Creation and the Privilege of Communication
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SIX "But Not the Ownership Thereof": The Peculiar Property Status of the Broadcast License (page 219)
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SEVEN Broadcast Copyright and the Vicissitudes of Authorship in Electronic Culture (page 256)
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EIGHT Viewing as Property: Broadcasting's Audience Commodity (page 275)
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NINE Toward a New Politics of Electronic Media (page 309)
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Index (page 329)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
---|---|---|
AJS | 102.5 (Mar. 1997): 1494-1496 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/2782342 |
TC | 39.1 (Jan. 1998): 173-175 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/3107036 |
JEL | 35.3 (Sep. 1997): 1411-1412 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/2730006 |
CS | 26.5 (Sep. 1997): 632-633 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/2655664 |
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Citable Link
Published: c1996
Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
- 9780226777221 (paper)
- 9780226777214 (hardcover)
- 9780226777290 (ebook)