|  | Valdivia, Angharad N. (ed.) The International Encyclopedia of Media Studies
  1. Edition December 2012 900.- Euro 2012. 4324 Pages, 6 Volumes, Hardcover - Handbook/Reference Book - ISBN 978-1-4051-9356-6 - John Wiley & Sons
|
| Buy now
|
| Short description Truly global in scope and covering a diverse range of topics, The International Encyclopedia of Media Studies provides the definitive resource for students, scholars, and faculty in this rapidly evolving and dynamically complex field. The Encyclopedia brings together cutting-edge scholarship from over 200 contributors, arranged thematically across 6 volumes edited by an international team of the world's best scholars and teachers. The volumes explore the history and foundations of the field; production; content and representation; audience and interpretation; media effects and cognition; and the future of the field.
From the contents Volume I: Media History and the Foundations of Media Studies: John Nerone
PART 1: Approaches
PART 2: Moments
PART 3: Foundations
Volume II: Media Production: Vicki Mayer
PART 1: Production Regimes and Infrastructures
PART 2: The Cultural Industries and the Organization of Production
PART 3: Product and Content Flows
PART 4: Production Work and Practices
PART 5: Production Cultures
PART 6: The Ethics of Production
Volume III: Content and Representation: Sharon R. Mazzarella
PART 1: Persuasion and Information
PART 2: Entertainment
PART 3: Interaction and Performance
Volume IV: Audience and Interpretation: Radhika Parameswaran
PART 1: Expanding the Horizons of Audience Studies
PART 2: Practicing Reflexivity in and out of the Field
PART 3: Finding and Engaging Global Audiences
PART 4: Comprehending Online Audiences
PART 5: Empowering Audiences as Citizens
Volume V: Media Effects/Media Psychology: Erica Scharrer
PART 1: Theories and Processes/Processing
PART 2: Evidence of Effects
PART 3: The Young Audience
Volume VI: Media Studies Futures: Kelly Gates
PART 1: The Future Of Media Studies: Theory, Methods, Pedagogy
PART 2: Social and Mobile Media Futures
PART 3: Industry Futures
PART 4: Journalism and Media Policy Futures
PART 5: Interactivity, Affect, and the Future of Media Subjectivities
PART 6: Whose Future? Children, Youth Cultures, and Digital Media
PART 7: What Future? Or, The Unsustainable Present
|
|
| |