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[ecrea] New Book: America's Battle for Media Democracy
Fri Nov 28 19:07:52 GMT 2014
My new book /America's Battle for Media Democracy: The Triumph of
Corporate Libertarianism and the Future of Media Reform/ was officially
released earlier this month, and it's now available as an e-book and in
paperback. Focusing on media activism around radio and newspapers in the
1940s, the book shows how this history holds much contemporary relevance
for policy issues like net neutrality and the future of digital journalism.
More info here: http://victorpickard.com/book/
*Table of Contents*
Introduction: The policy origins and normative foundations of American media
1. The revolt against radio
2. A progressive turn at the FCC
3. The battle of the Blue Book
4. The origins of the Fairness Doctrine
5. The 1940s newspaper crisis and the birth of the Hutchins Commission
6. Should the giants be slain or persuaded to be good?
7. The postwar settlement for American media
Conclusion: Confronting market failure
*Reviews*
"Today’s media didn't have to be so bad. Pickard tells a riveting and
heretofore largely unknown story of how corporate media had its way with
the public interest and trivialized our country’s civic dialogue,
despite the efforts of reformers and a once-heroic FCC. Bringing the
story right up to today’s high-stakes battle for an Open Internet, this
is 'must-must' reading for anyone interested in putting our democracy
back on track."
*Hon. Michael J. Copps, FCC Commissioner, 2001–2012*
"/America's Battle for Media Democracy/ is a well-researched,
thoughtful, and lucid critique of media policy in the contemporary
United States. To make his case, Pickard turns to history. During the
1940s, media activists joined together with government officials,
academics, and even some corporate leaders to articulate an expansive,
social democratic vision for newspapers and radio. The defeat of this
movement hastened the triumph of corporate libertarianism - a tradition
whose origin Pickard provocatively traces not to the free market
fundamentalism of the recent past, but, rather, to the political
settlement that followed the Second World War."
*Richard R. John, Columbia University*
"In /America’s Battle for Media Democracy/, Victor Pickard has produced
a landmark work in communication history and media studies. Based on
painstaking research, [he] sheds crucial new light on the political
debates that created the contemporary commercial media system in the
United States, and by doing so he allows us to envision a different and
better future. This is mandatory reading for everyone concerned with
media and politics."
*Robert W. McChesney, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign*
"Victor Pickard is a scholar on the rise. His writing is fine and to the
point. There is always need for solid media history based on primary
research and good analysis - and this book fulfills both."
*Christopher Sterling, George Washington University*
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