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Communicating in Canada's Past

Communicating in Canada's Past
Author: Gene Allen
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 694
Release: 2009-01-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0802094988

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The first collection of its kind, this volume assembles both well-established and up-and-coming scholars to address sizable gaps in the literature on media history in Canada.


Communicating in Canada's Past

Communicating in Canada's Past
Author: Gene Allen
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 694
Release: 2009-11-14
Genre: History
ISBN: 1442697008

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Communicating in Canada's Past evolved out of essays presented at the inaugural Conference on Media History in Canada of 2006, which brought together media historians from across the disciplines and from both French and English Canada. The first collection of its kind, this volume assembles both well-established and up-and-coming scholars to address sizable gaps in the literature on media history in Canada. Communicating in Canada's Past includes a substantial introduction to media history as a field of study, historiographical essays by senior scholars Mary Vipond, Paul Rutherford, and Fernande Roy, and original research essays on a range of subjects, including print journalism, radio, television, and advertising. Editors Gene Allen and Daniel J. Robinson have provided a sophisticated, wide-ranging introduction for those who are new to media history while also assembling a valuable collection of new research and theory for those already familiar with the field.


Communication History in Canada

Communication History in Canada
Author: Daniel J. Robinson
Publisher: Don Mills, Ont. : Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 308
Release: 2004
Genre: History
ISBN:

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A distinctive blend of history, geography, government, economics, and biculturalism meant that communication systems and the mass media evolved differently in Canada than in either the United States or Europe. Bringing together twenty-six articles that range in subject from colonial newspapers in the early 1800s to music television in the 1980s, Communication History in Canada provides the historical foundation for a thorough contextual analysis of modern-day media and communication in this country. From Marshall McLuhan and Harold Innis to Mary Vipond and Will Straw, the authors in this volume represent a wide cross-section of disciplines, including history, communication studies, sociology, journalism, political science, and film studies. Their essays are grouped in five sections: Time, Space, Technology, and Nation, which explores the relationship between media, society, and human thought; Postal Systems and Telecommunications, which centres on the telegraph, the telephone, and computers; Print Mass Media, which describes the origins and diffusion of newspapers and magazines, with a particular emphasis on commercialization through advertising and market research; Broadcast Media, which charts the rise of radio broadcasting in the inter-war years and of television broadcasting from the 1950s through the 1980s; and Cultural Industries, which examines film and sound recording.


How Canadians Communicate

How Canadians Communicate
Author: David Taras
Publisher: University of Calgary Press
Total Pages: 333
Release: 2003
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1552381048

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How Canadians Communicate, Vol. 1 is a timely collection that chronicles the extraordinary changes that are shaking the foundations of Canada's cultural and communications industries in the twenty-first century. With essays from some of Canada's foremost media scholars, this book discusses the major trends and developments that have taken place in government policy, corporate strategies, creative communities, and various communication mediums: newspapers, films, cellular and palm technology, the Internet, libraries, TV, music, and book publishing. This volume addresses many issues unique to Canada in a broader framework of global communications. Specifically, it looks at new media communications in Aboriginal communities, the changing role of the state in cultural institutions, the conglomeratization of the media, the threat of American and global communications to Canadian voices, and the struggle to retain and reclaim local and national identities in the face of globalization. With articles from academics and professionals across Canada, How Canadians Communicate, Vol.1 provides the most current perspectives on communication in Canada in a rapidly changing world of technology and global communication.


How Canadians Communicate IV

How Canadians Communicate IV
Author: David Taras
Publisher: Athabasca University Press
Total Pages: 401
Release: 2012
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 1926836812

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A comprehensive, up to date, and probing examination of media and politics in Canada.


How Canadians Communicate II

How Canadians Communicate II
Author: David Taras
Publisher: University of Calgary Press
Total Pages: 354
Release: 2007
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 1552382249

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The contributors to this first volume of How Canadians communicate focus on the question what does Canadian popular culture have to say about the construction and negotiation of Canadian national identity?


Crisis Communication in Canada

Crisis Communication in Canada
Author: Duncan Koerber
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 278
Release: 2017-10-25
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1442609222

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Crisis Communication in Canada offers a unique scholarly and professional contribution, synthesizing recent research and providing a context for practical advice.


Citizens and Nation

Citizens and Nation
Author: Gerald Friesen
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2000-04-28
Genre: History
ISBN: 1442690844

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Grandmother Andre told stories in front of a campfire. Elizabeth Goudie wrote a memoir in school scribblers. Phyllis Knight taped hours of interviews with her son. Today's families rely on television and video cameras. They are all making history. In a different approach to that old issue, 'the Canadian identity,' Gerald Friesen links the media studies of Harold Innis to the social history of recent decades. The result is a framework for Canadian history as told by ordinary people. Friesen suggests that the common peoples' perceptions of time and space in what is now Canada changed with innovations in the dominant means of communication. He defines four communication-based epochs in Canadian history: the oral-traditional world of pre-contact Aboriginal people; the textual-settler household of immigrants; the print-capitalism of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; and the screen-capitalism that has emerged in the last few decades. This analysis of communication is linked to distinctive political economies, each of which incorporates its predecessors in an increasingly complex social order. In each epoch, using the new communication technologies, people struggled to find the political means by which they could ensure that they and their households survived and, if they were lucky, prospered. Canada is the sum of their endeavours. "Citizens and Nation" demonstrates that it is possible to find meaning in the nation's past that will interest, among others, a new, young, and multicultural reading audience.


Canadian Communication Policy and Law

Canadian Communication Policy and Law
Author: Sara Bannerman
Publisher: Canadian Scholars
Total Pages: 386
Release: 2020-05-20
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1773381725

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Canadian Communication Policy and Law provides a uniquely Canadian focus and perspective on telecommunications policy, broadcasting policy, internet regulation, freedom of expression, censorship, defamation, privacy, government surveillance, intellectual property, and more. Taking a critical stance, Sara Bannerman draws attention to unequal power structures by asking the question, whom does Canadian communication policy and law serve? Key theories for analysis of law and policy issues—such as pluralist, libertarian, critical political economy, Marxist, feminist, queer, critical race, critical disability, postcolonial, and intersectional theories—are discussed in detail in this accessibly written text. From critical and theoretical analysis to legal research and citation skills, Canadian Communication Policy and Law encourages deep analytic engagement. Serving as a valuable resource for students who are undertaking research and writing on legal topics for the first time, this comprehensive text is well suited for undergraduate communication and media studies programs.


Mass Communication in Canada

Mass Communication in Canada
Author: Rowland Lorimer
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 362
Release: 2007
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

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'Mass Communication in Canada' examines the past, present and future of mass communication and its effects on society.