...including C. H. Sterling, Kenneth Swerdlow, and Susan LeakeyWatler up to 1977; M. T. Cozzola, 1978–87, NoahArceneaux 1988–1991,and Steve Sternberg and Stacey Lynn of True North for data since 1993.Tables 5-A through 5...
...201337.Gallagher:A., J. Fialka, C. Rhodes, and C. Arceneaux. 2002. Working with families: Rethinking denial...Beverly Hills: Sage.Greenfield, J. 1972. A child called Noah: A family journey. New York: Holt.Hartman, A. 1997...
......shortcomings might frustrate some readers, but scholars interested in television history or audience studies should find enough raw material to justify seeking this book out. [Author Affiliation] NoahArceneaux San Diego State University...
...Historians agree that World War I was a crucial period in the development of radio, though one aspect has not been examined in detail: the wartime ban on amateur radio. Drawing upon documents from the Department of Commerce in the National Archives, this article explores the methods used to enforce...
...On March 18, 1922, two rival department stores in Philadelphia launched radio stations, projecting their sales floors far beyond the immediate, physical boundaries and into the ether (Barnouw, 1966, p. 100). WFI, operated by Strawbridge & Clothier, was first on the air with local politicians,...
...Stamm, Michael. Sound Business: Newspapers, Radio, and the Politics of New Media. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011. 256 pp. $ 45. The relationship between newspapers and the radio industry has inspired a fair amount of historical scholarship, including studies ofthe infamous...
...In the early 1920s, audiences for the first radio stations were primarily male hobbyists who had assembled their own receivers. By the end of the decade, radio had become widespread and factory-built receivers were the norm. Drawing from social construction theories of technology, this study...
...Razlogova, Elena. The Listener's Voice: Early Radio and the American Public. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011. 224 pp. $39.95. In contrast to critics who might claim that a relentless, homogenizing, top-down mass culture has dominated American society for the past 100 years,...
...Following the Civil War, African Americans in Texas celebrated their emancipation with an annual holiday known as "Juneteenth. " The celebration migrated to other areas of the country, and over the past several years there has been a concerted effort to establish it as a national holiday. Using the...
......Franz and Ridout 2010; Hillygus and Jackman 2003; Huber and Arceneaux 2007; Shaw 1999a, 1999b; Vavreck 2009). Though there...Heath [2005] for an important exception, and Huber and Arceneaux [2007] for a recent analysis of a campaign's reinforcement......
......shortcomings might frustrate some readers, but scholars interested in television history or audience studies should find enough raw material to justify seeking this book out. [Author Affiliation] NoahArceneaux San Diego State University...
...Historians agree that World War I was a crucial period in the development of radio, though one aspect has not been examined in detail: the wartime ban on amateur radio. Drawing upon documents from the Department of Commerce in the National Archives, this article explores the methods used to enforce...
...On March 18, 1922, two rival department stores in Philadelphia launched radio stations, projecting their sales floors far beyond the immediate, physical boundaries and into the ether (Barnouw, 1966, p. 100). WFI, operated by Strawbridge & Clothier, was first on the air with local politicians,...
...Stamm, Michael. Sound Business: Newspapers, Radio, and the Politics of New Media. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011. 256 pp. $ 45. The relationship between newspapers and the radio industry has inspired a fair amount of historical scholarship, including studies ofthe infamous...
...In the early 1920s, audiences for the first radio stations were primarily male hobbyists who had assembled their own receivers. By the end of the decade, radio had become widespread and factory-built receivers were the norm. Drawing from social construction theories of technology, this study...
...Razlogova, Elena. The Listener's Voice: Early Radio and the American Public. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011. 224 pp. $39.95. In contrast to critics who might claim that a relentless, homogenizing, top-down mass culture has dominated American society for the past 100 years,...
...Following the Civil War, African Americans in Texas celebrated their emancipation with an annual holiday known as "Juneteenth. " The celebration migrated to other areas of the country, and over the past several years there has been a concerted effort to establish it as a national holiday. Using the...
......Franz and Ridout 2010; Hillygus and Jackman 2003; Huber and Arceneaux 2007; Shaw 1999a, 1999b; Vavreck 2009). Though there...Heath [2005] for an important exception, and Huber and Arceneaux [2007] for a recent analysis of a campaign's reinforcement......