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Desert Storm and the mass media / editors, Bradley S. Greenberg, Walter Gantz.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Hampton Press communication seriesPublisher: Cresskill, N.J. : Hampton Press, [1993]Copyright date: ©1993Description: xiv, 447 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1881303349
  • 9781881303343
  • 1881303357
  • 9781881303350
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 956.70442 20
LOC classification:
  • DS79.739 .D47 1993
Contents:
About the Authors -- Introduction -- 1. Sobering Thoughts on Sound Bites Seen 'Round the World -- 2. Public Relations as a Weapon of Modern Warfare -- 3. The Crisis in the Gulf and the Lack of Critical Media Discourse -- 4. The Routinization of News Production -- 5. We're Talking War: Symbols, Strategies and Images -- 6. Toward a Propaganda Analysis of the Gulf War -- 7. Telling the Gulf War Story: Coverage in Five Papers -- 8. Differences Between CNN and the Broadcast Networks in Live War Coverage -- 9. Agenda Setting During the Persian Gulf Crisis -- 10. Media Coverage and U.S. Public Opinion on the Persian Gulf -- 11. How the U.S. Found Out About the War -- 12. How We Thought About the Gulf War -- 13. Patterns of Diffusion and Information-Seeking -- 14. Desert Storm and the Tundra Telegraph: Information Diffusion in a Media-Poor Environment -- 15. Public Perceptions and Evaluations of the Functions of the Media in the Persian Gulf War -- 16. Audience Evaluations of U.S. News Media Performance in the Gulf War -- 17. Selective Exposure to TV War News Sources During the Gulf War -- 18. The Public's Reaction to a Mediated War -- 19. Attitudes Toward the Gulf War and News Criticalness -- 20. Attitudes Toward Advertising One Day and One Week After the Gulf War Began -- 21. The Gulf Crisis and Television: The Public's Response in Britain -- 22. Priming the Audience: Australian Response to the Gulf War -- 23. Between Reality and News: Differential Perception of the War in the Gulf -- 24. Parents' and Children's Emotional Reactions to TV Coverage of the Gulf War -- 25. Parent and Child Emotional Involvement in the Netherlands -- 26. Anxiety, War and Children: The Role of Television -- 27. Children's Affective Responses to News Coverage of the War -- 28. British Children's Knowledge of, Emotional Reaction to, and Ways of Making Sense of the War -- Summary and Commentary -- References -- Author Index -- Subject Index.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 956.70442 DES (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A125813B

Includes bibliographical references (pages 415-435) and index.

About the Authors -- Introduction -- 1. Sobering Thoughts on Sound Bites Seen 'Round the World -- 2. Public Relations as a Weapon of Modern Warfare -- 3. The Crisis in the Gulf and the Lack of Critical Media Discourse -- 4. The Routinization of News Production -- 5. We're Talking War: Symbols, Strategies and Images -- 6. Toward a Propaganda Analysis of the Gulf War -- 7. Telling the Gulf War Story: Coverage in Five Papers -- 8. Differences Between CNN and the Broadcast Networks in Live War Coverage -- 9. Agenda Setting During the Persian Gulf Crisis -- 10. Media Coverage and U.S. Public Opinion on the Persian Gulf -- 11. How the U.S. Found Out About the War -- 12. How We Thought About the Gulf War -- 13. Patterns of Diffusion and Information-Seeking -- 14. Desert Storm and the Tundra Telegraph: Information Diffusion in a Media-Poor Environment -- 15. Public Perceptions and Evaluations of the Functions of the Media in the Persian Gulf War -- 16. Audience Evaluations of U.S. News Media Performance in the Gulf War -- 17. Selective Exposure to TV War News Sources During the Gulf War -- 18. The Public's Reaction to a Mediated War -- 19. Attitudes Toward the Gulf War and News Criticalness -- 20. Attitudes Toward Advertising One Day and One Week After the Gulf War Began -- 21. The Gulf Crisis and Television: The Public's Response in Britain -- 22. Priming the Audience: Australian Response to the Gulf War -- 23. Between Reality and News: Differential Perception of the War in the Gulf -- 24. Parents' and Children's Emotional Reactions to TV Coverage of the Gulf War -- 25. Parent and Child Emotional Involvement in the Netherlands -- 26. Anxiety, War and Children: The Role of Television -- 27. Children's Affective Responses to News Coverage of the War -- 28. British Children's Knowledge of, Emotional Reaction to, and Ways of Making Sense of the War -- Summary and Commentary -- References -- Author Index -- Subject Index.

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