
Mass Communication Theory Foundations, Ferment, and Future
by Baran, Stanley J.; Davis, Dennis K.Buy New
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Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
Preface | p. xiii |
Introduction to Mass Communication Theory | p. 1 |
Introduction | p. 2 |
Three Questions about Media | p. 6 |
Defining and Redefining Mass Communication | p. 9 |
Four Eras of Media Theory | p. 10 |
The Era of Mass Society and Mass Culture | p. 12 |
Emergence of a Scientific Perspective on Mass Communication | p. 13 |
The Limited Effects Paradigm Emerges | p. 15 |
Cultural Criticism: A Challenge to the Limited Effects Paradigm | p. 16 |
Effects Researchers Strike Back: Emergence of Moderate Effects | p. 17 |
Ongoing Debate over Issues | p. 19 |
Exploring Mass Communication Theory | p. 20 |
Critical Thinking Questions | p. 22 |
Significant People and Their Writing | p. 22 |
Mass Communication Theory | p. 23 |
Overview | p. 24 |
Science and Human Behavior | p. 24 |
Schizophrenic Social Science | p. 29 |
Defining Theory | p. 29 |
Mass Communication and Theory | p. 32 |
Summary | p. 33 |
Exploring Mass Communication Theory | p. 34 |
Critical Thinking Questions | p. 35 |
Significant People and Their Writing | p. 35 |
Era of Mass Society and Mass Culture | p. 36 |
The Rise of Media Industries and Mass Society Theory | p. 38 |
Overview | p. 39 |
The Beginnings | p. 40 |
The Rise of Yellow Journalism | p. 42 |
Cycles of Mass Media Development and Decline | p. 42 |
Mass Society Critics and the Great Debate over Media | p. 45 |
Mass Society Theory Assumptions | p. 46 |
Rise of the Great Debate over Media | p. 54 |
Early Examples of Mass Society Theory | p. 55 |
Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft | p. 56 |
Mechanical and Organic Solidarity | p. 57 |
Mass Society Theory in Contemporary Times | p. 58 |
Summary | p. 61 |
Exploring Mass Communication Theory | p. 62 |
Critical Thinking Questions | p. 62 |
Significant People and Their Writing | p. 63 |
The Rise of Media Theory in the Age of Propaganda | p. 64 |
Overview | p. 66 |
The Origin of Propaganda | p. 67 |
Propaganda Comes to the United States | p. 70 |
Behaviorism | p. 71 |
Freudianism | p. 72 |
Magic Bullet Theories | p. 72 |
Lasswell's Propaganda Theory | p. 74 |
Lippmann's Theory of Public Opinion Formation | p. 75 |
Reaction Against Early Propaganda Theory | p. 77 |
Modern Propaganda Theory | p. 78 |
Libertarianism Reborn | p. 81 |
Summary | p. 82 |
Exploring Mass Communication Theory | p. 83 |
Critical Thinking Questions | p. 84 |
Significant People and Their Writing | p. 84 |
Normative Theories of Mass Communication | p. 86 |
Overview | p. 88 |
The Origin of Normative Theories of Media | p. 89 |
The Origin of Libertarian Thought | p. 90 |
The Marketplace of Ideas: A New Form of Radical Libertarianism | p. 93 |
Government Regulation of Media--The Federal Radio Commission | p. 97 |
Professionalization of Journalism | p. 98 |
Limitations of Professionalization | p. 99 |
Social Responsibility Theory of the Press: A Postwar Compromise | p. 102 |
The Cold War Tests Social Responsibility Theory | p. 105 |
Using Social Responsibility Theory to Guide Professional Practice | p. 106 |
Is There Still a Role for Social Responsibility Theory? | p. 107 |
Civic Journalism | p. 110 |
Other Normative Theories | p. 112 |
Summary | p. 113 |
Exploring Mass Communication Theory | p. 114 |
Critical Thinking Questions | p. 116 |
Significant People and Their Writing | p. 116 |
The Rise and Fall of Limited Effects | p. 118 |
Limited Effects Theory Emerges | p. 120 |
Overview | p. 121 |
Paradigm Shifts | p. 123 |
The Paradigm Shift in Mass Communication Theory | p. 123 |
The Two-Step Flow of Information and Influence | p. 126 |
Limitations in the Lazarsfeld Model | p. 130 |
Limited Effects Theory | p. 131 |
Attitude Change Theories | p. 132 |
Carl Hovland and the Experimental Section | p. 133 |
The Communication Research Program | p. 136 |
Emergence of the Media Effects Focus | p. 137 |
The Selective Processes | p. 138 |
The Hovland-Lazarsfeld Legacy | p. 142 |
Limitations of the Experimental Persuasion Research | p. 144 |
Summary | p. 146 |
Exploring Mass Communication Theory | p. 147 |
Critical Thinking Questions | p. 148 |
Significant People and Their Writing | p. 148 |
Middle-Range Theory and the Consolidation of the Limited Effects Paradigm | p. 149 |
Overview | p. 152 |
Building a Paradigm | p. 153 |
Robert Merton: Master Paradigm Maker | p. 155 |
The Functional Analysis Approach | p. 157 |
Information Flow Theory | p. 159 |
Diffusion Theory | p. 161 |
Klapper's Phenomenistic Theory | p. 163 |
An Apology for Mass Entertainment | p. 166 |
Elite Pluralism | p. 167 |
C. Wright Mills and The Power Elite | p. 169 |
Assumptions of the Limited Effects Paradigm | p. 171 |
Drawbacks of the Limited Effects Paradigm | p. 172 |
Contributions of the Limited Effects Paradigm | p. 172 |
Summary | p. 173 |
Exploring Mass Communication Theory | p. 174 |
Critical Thinking Questions | p. 175 |
Significant People and Their Writing | p. 176 |
Challenging the Dominant Paradigm: Children, Systems, and Effects | p. 177 |
Overview | p. 177 |
Focus on Children and Violence | p. 178 |
Television Violence Theories | p. 182 |
Catharsis | p. 182 |
Social Learning | p. 184 |
Social Cognition from Mass Media | p. 185 |
Aggressive Cues | p. 188 |
The Context of Mediated Violence | p. 189 |
Active Theory of Television Viewing | p. 190 |
The Developmental Perspective | p. 191 |
Media and Children's Socialization | p. 192 |
Systems Theories of Communication Processes | p. 193 |
The Rise of Systems Theories | p. 194 |
Mathematical Theory of Communication | p. 195 |
Modeling Systems | p. 197 |
A Simple Systems Model | p. 197 |
Applying Systems Models to Human Communication | p. 198 |
Adoption of Systems Models by Mass Communication Theorists | p. 199 |
Closed versus Open Systems | p. 200 |
The Utility of Systems Models | p. 201 |
Estimating Causality | p. 202 |
A Focus on Structure and Function | p. 203 |
Summary | p. 206 |
Exploring Mass Communication Theory | p. 207 |
Critical Thinking Questions | p. 208 |
Significant People and Their Writing | p. 208 |
Contemporary Mass Communication Theory-Searching for Consensus and Confronting Challenges | p. 210 |
Emergence of Critical and Cultural Theories of Mass Communication | p. 212 |
Overview | p. 213 |
Changing Times | p. 214 |
The Cultural Turn in Media Research | p. 215 |
Macroscopic versus Microscopic Theories | p. 216 |
Critical Theory | p. 217 |
Comparing Cultural Theories with Those Based on Empirical Research | p. 218 |
Rise of Cultural Theories in Europe | p. 220 |
Marxist Theory | p. 220 |
Neomarxism | p. 221 |
Textual Analysis and Literary Criticism | p. 222 |
The Frankfurt School | p. 223 |
Development of Neomarxist Theory in Britain | p. 224 |
Political Economy Theory | p. 227 |
The Debate Between Cultural Studies and Political Economy Theorists | p. 228 |
Cultural Studies: Transmissional versus Ritual Perspectives | p. 229 |
Symbolic Interaction | p. 230 |
Social Construction of Reality | p. 235 |
Research on Popular Culture in the United States | p. 240 |
Summary | p. 241 |
Exploring Mass Communication Theory | p. 243 |
Critical Thinking Questions | p. 243 |
Significant People and Their Writing | p. 244 |
Media and Audiences: Theories About the Role of Media in Everyday Life | p. 245 |
Overview | p. 246 |
Audience Theories: From Source-Dominated to Active Audience Perspectives | p. 247 |
Limitations of Early Audience-Centered Research | p. 249 |
Confusion of Media Functions and Media Uses | p. 250 |
Revival of the Uses and Gratifications Approach | p. 252 |
Measuring Uses and Gratifications | p. 254 |
The Active Audience Revisited | p. 256 |
Uses and Gratifications and Effects | p. 260 |
Development of Reception Studies: Decoding and Sensemaking | p. 260 |
Feminist Reception Studies | p. 263 |
Framing and Frame Analysis | p. 265 |
Information Processing Theory | p. 270 |
An Information Processing Model | p. 273 |
Processing Television News | p. 274 |
Some Final Words to Clear the Mist | p. 276 |
Summary | p. 278 |
Exploring Mass Communication Theory | p. 279 |
Critical Thinking Questions | p. 280 |
Significant People and Their Writing | p. 281 |
Theories of Media, Culture, and Society | p. 282 |
Overview | p. 283 |
Marshall McLuhan: The Medium is the Message and Massage | p. 285 |
Harold Innis: The Bias of Communication | p. 286 |
McLuhan: Understanding Media | p. 287 |
Social Marketing Theory | p. 291 |
The Knowledge Gap | p. 296 |
Agenda-Setting | p. 299 |
The Spiral of Silence | p. 303 |
Media System Dependency Theory | p. 307 |
Cultivation Analysis | p. 309 |
The Controversy | p. 313 |
The Products of Cultivation Analysis | p. 315 |
The Mean World Index | p. 316 |
A Final Note on Cultivation | p. 316 |
Media as Culture Industries: The Commodification of Culture | p. 318 |
Advertising: The Ultimate Cultural Commodity | p. 321 |
News Production Research | p. 322 |
Media Intrusion Theory | p. 325 |
Summary | p. 328 |
Exploring Mass Communication Theory | p. 330 |
Critical Thinking Questions | p. 331 |
Significant People and Their Writing | p. 331 |
Trends in Mass Communication Theory: Seeking Consensus, Facing Challenges | p. 333 |
Overview | p. 334 |
Communication Science | p. 335 |
Two Views of Communication Science | p. 336 |
An Example of Communication Science | p. 337 |
Social Semiotics Theory | p. 339 |
The Communications Revolution | p. 343 |
Globalization and Media | p. 346 |
Globalization Problems | p. 348 |
Role of Media in Globalization | p. 349 |
Postmodern Criticism of Modernity | p. 350 |
Avoiding the Dreams of Modernity | p. 352 |
Challenges from Cognitive Psychology and Biological Science | p. 354 |
The Media Literacy Movement | p. 358 |
Two Views on Media Literacy | p. 359 |
Summary | p. 360 |
Exploring Mass Communication Theory | p. 364 |
Critical Thinking Questions | p. 365 |
Significant People and Their Writing | p. 366 |
References | p. 367 |
Index | p. 396 |
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