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The Media and the Persian Gulf War Robert E. Denton Jr.

The Media and the Persian Gulf War By Robert E. Denton Jr.

The Media and the Persian Gulf War by Robert E. Denton Jr.


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Summary

Chapters discuss such specific topics as the relationship between the press and the censoring military, CNN's and C-SPAN's coverage, how talk radio and television covered the war, the media's depiction of women in the military, the Gulf War as a referent in advertising, and how popular culture legitimized the war.

The Media and the Persian Gulf War Summary

The Media and the Persian Gulf War by Robert E. Denton Jr.

Many scholars call the Persian Gulf conflict the first prime-time war. Certainly, the technologies, strategies, and skills of the military in managing the public agenda were equal to those of the television networks and major print organizations. The Media and the Persian Gulf War focuses on the processes and effects of the media, both leading up to and during the mother of all battles in 1990 and 1991. Broad in scope and varied in methodologies, the chapters span the media of television, radio, print, and film. Chapters discuss such specific topics as the relationship between the press and the censoring military, CNN's and C-SPAN's coverage, how talk radio and television covered the war, the media's depiction of women in the military, the Gulf War as a referent in advertising, and how popular culture legitimized the war. This work will be an important resource for scholars in political and mass communication, popular culture, and political science.

About Robert E. Denton Jr.

ROBERT E. DENTON, JR. is Professor and Head of the Department of Communication Studies at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. In addition to numerous articles, he is the author of several books, including The Primetime Presidency of Ronald Reagan, Political Communication In America, second edition, (with Gary Woodward), and Ethical Dimensions of Political Communication (Praeger 1988, 1990, and 1991). Denton serves as associate editor of Presidential Studies Quarterly and as editor for the Praeger Series in Political Communication and Presidential Studies.

Table of Contents

The Rules of the Game: The Military and the Press in the Persian War by Gary C. Woodward Television as an Instrument of War by Robert E. Denton, Jr. The Natural, and Inevitable, Phases of War Reporting: Historical Shadows, New Communication in the Persian Gulf by Donald L. Shaw and Shannon E. Martin Media Perspectives on World Opinion During the Kuwaiti Crisis by Frank Louis Rusciano Vox Populi: Talk Radio and TV Cover the Gulf War by Dan Nimmo and Mark Hovind Constructing News Narratives: ABC and CNN Cover the Gulf War by Bethami A. Dobkin C-SPAN's Coverage of the Gulf War: Television as Town Square by Janette Kenner Muir News Viewing, Authoritarianism, and Attitudes Toward the Gulf War by Mary Beth Oliver, Marie-Louise mares, and Joanne Cantor War in the Global Village: A Seven-Country Comparison of the Television News Coverage of the Beginning of the Gulf War by David L. Swanson and Larry David Smith Media Coverage of Women in the Gulf War by Anne Johnston What Did You Advertise With the War, Daddy?: Using the Persian Gulf War as a Referent System in Advertising by Matthew P. McAllister Celluloid Heroes and Smart Bombs: Hollywood at War in the Middle East by Stephen Prince From the Great War to the Gulf War: Popular Entertainment and the Legitimation of Warfare by James Combs Selected Bibliography Index

Additional information

NPB9780275942328
9780275942328
0275942325
The Media and the Persian Gulf War by Robert E. Denton Jr.
New
Hardback
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
1993-04-30
344
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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