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Culture, communication, and national identity: the case of Canadian television
Richard Collins
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Frontmatter
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PREFACE: THE MARTIAN VIEW (page ix)
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS (page xix)
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1 Introduction (page 3)
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2 Structure and Historical Development of Canadian Television (page 42)
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3 1968 and After: The Public Sector and the Market from the Broadcasting Act to Caplan/Sauvageau (page 66)
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4 Nationalism (page 105)
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5 Maximization of Satisfaction: The Market Paradigm (page 141)
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6 Dependency Theory and Television in Canada (page 160)
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7 The Intellectuals, Television, and the Two Solitudes (page 190)
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8 The Television Audience (page 228)
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9 National Culture; or, Where Is Here? (page 250)
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10 The Single Dramas: Le misère canadienne (page 277)
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11 The Continental Culture and Canadian Television Drama: The Mini Series (page 298)
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12 Conclusion (page 327)
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REFERENCES (page 345)
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INDEX (page 359)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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CPP/AdP | 17.2 (Jun. 1991): 214-215 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/3551036 |
Citable Link
Published: 1990
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
- 9780802027337 (hardcover)
- 9780802067722 (paper)
- 9781442673670 (ebook)