Share the story of what Open Access means to you
University of Michigan needs your feedback to better understand how readers are using openly available ebooks. You can help by taking a short, privacy-friendly survey.
Selling the air: a critique of the policy of commercial broadcasting in the United States
Thomas Streeter
You don't have access to this book. Please try to log in with your institution.
Log in
-
Frontmatter
-
Acknowledgments (page ix)
-
Introduction (page xi)
-
PART ONE Liberal Television
-
ONE The Fact of Television: A Theoretical Prologue (page 3)
-
TWO Liberalism, Corporate Liberalism (page 22)
-
THREE A Revisionist History of Broadcasting, 1900-1934 (page 59)
-
-
PART TWO The Politics of Broadcast Policy in a Corporate Liberal State
-
FOUR Inside the Beltway as an Interpretive Community: The Politics of Policy (page 113)
-
FIVE Postmodern Property: Toward a New Political Economy of Broadcasting (page 163)
-
-
PART THREE Selling the Air: Property Creation and the Privilege of Communication
-
SIX "But Not the Ownership Thereof": The Peculiar Property Status of the Broadcast License (page 219)
-
SEVEN Broadcast Copyright and the Vicissitudes of Authorship in Electronic Culture (page 256)
-
EIGHT Viewing as Property: Broadcasting's Audience Commodity (page 275)
-
NINE Toward a New Politics of Electronic Media (page 309)
-
-
Index (page 329)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
---|---|---|
AJS | 102.5 (Mar. 1997): 1494-1496 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/2782342 |
TC | 39.1 (Jan. 1998): 173-175 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/3107036 |
JEL | 35.3 (Sep. 1997): 1411-1412 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/2730006 |
CS | 26.5 (Sep. 1997): 632-633 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/2655664 |
Citable Link
Published: c1996
Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
- 9780226777221 (paper)
- 9780226777214 (hardcover)
- 9780226777290 (ebook)