Author: Spigel, Lynn & Curtin, Michael; editors Title: The Revolution Wasn't Televised: Sixties Television and Social Conflict
Description: New York / London, Routledge, 1997. orig.boards. 24x16cm, (ii),361 pp. textual photo illustrations. ISBN: 0415911214. Small label to rear cover. Light smudge to front cover. VG. ¶ Contents: J. Sconce "The 'Outer Limits' of Oblivion"; L. Spigel "White Flight"; J. D'acci "Nobody's Woman? 'Honey West' and the New Sexuality"; M.Luckett "Girl Watchers: Patty Duke and Teen TV"; H. Jenkins "Dennis the Menace, 'the All American Handfull' "; M. Alvey "The Independents: Rethinking the Television Studio System"; W. Boddy "Senator Dodd Goes to Hollywood: Investigating Video Violence"; J. Turow "James Dean in a Surgical Gown"; A. Bodroghkozy "The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour and the Youth Rebellion"; T. Streeter "Blues Skies and Strange Bedfellows: the Discourse of Cable Television"; M. Curtin "Dynasty in Drag: Imagining Global TV"; V.E. Johnson "Citizen Welk: Bubbles, Blue Hair, and Middle America", H. Newcombe "From Old Frontier to New Frontier"; S. Classen " Southern Discomforts: the Racial Struggle over Popular TV"; R.E. Pearson " White Network/ Red Power: ABC's 'Custer' Series"; H. Gray "Remembering Civil Rights: Television, Memory, and the 1960s".
Keywords: 0415911214 Mass Communications, American Television, Social History, Broadcasting, Communication, Industry Industrial, Sociology, United States, Popular Culture
Price: US$ 59.00 Seller: Expatriate Bookshop of Denmark
- Book number: BOOKS000017I