CM VitalSource EPUB3 for Media & Culture 13e with The Film Experience 6e (6-Months Online) CO101 for Boston University
Thirteenth Edition|©2025 Richard Campbell; Christopher Martin; Bettina Fabos; Ron Becker; Timothy Corrigan; Patricia White
Table of Contents
Richard Campbell
Richard Campbell is professor emeritus and founding chair of the Department of Media, Journalism, and Film at Miami University, as well as the 2019 recipient of the university’s Benjamin Harrison Medallion for his “Outstanding Contribution to the Education of the Nation.” Campbell is the author of “60 Minutes” and the News: A Mythology for Middle America (1991) and coauthor of Cracked Coverage: Television News, the Anti-Cocaine Crusade, and the Reagan Legacy (1994). He has written for numerous publications, including Columbia Journalism Review, Critical Studies in Mass Communication, and TV Quarterly. Campbell is cocreator of Stats+Stories, a long-running podcast sponsored by Miami University and the American Statistical Association, and winner of the 2021 Communication Award from the Mathematical Association of America. His other projects include the digital Oxford Observer newspaper and Report for Ohio, initiatives aimed at getting more young journalists real-world experience covering under-reported areas in rural and urban communities. He is executive producer of a 2019 documentary on the role that Oxford, Ohio, played in 1964’s Freedom Summer, titled Training for Freedom: How Ordinary People in an Unusual Time and Unlikely Place Made Extraordinary History. He served for ten years on the board of directors for Cincinnati Public Radio and holds a PhD from Northwestern University.
Christopher Martin
Christopher R. Martin is a professor of digital journalism and former department head of the Department of Communication and Media at the University of Northern Iowa. He is author of two award-winning books on labor and the media: No Longer Newsworthy: How the Mainstream Media Abandoned the Working Class and Framed! Labor and the Corporate Media, both with Cornell University Press. He has written articles, book chapters, and reviews on journalism, televised sports, the Internet, and labor for several publications, including Communication Research, Journal of Communication, Journal of Communication Inquiry, Labor Studies Journal, Culture, Sport, and Society, NiemanReports, and Perspectives on Politics. He is also on the editorial board of the Journal of Communication Inquiry. He is a contributing scholar to the Center for Journalism & Liberty and a regular contributor to Working-Class Perspectives. Martin holds a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan and has also taught at Miami University.
Bettina Fabos
Bettina Fabos is a professor of visual communication and interactive digital studies at the University of Northern Iowa. She is the executive producer of the interactive web photo history Proud and Torn: A Visual Memoir of Hungarian History (proudandtorn.org); the cofounder of a public digital archive of Iowa family snapshots, Fortepan Iowa (fortepan.us); and a champion of the Creative Commons. Fabos has also written extensively about critical media literacy, Internet commercialization, the role of the Internet in education, and media representations of popular culture. Her work has been published in Visual Communication Quarterly, Library Trends, Review of Educational Research, and Harvard Educational Review and she has received numerous awards for her creative work. Fabos has also taught at Miami University and has a Ph.D. from the University of Iowa.
Ron Becker
RON BECKER is a professor of media and communication and strategic communication at Miami University. He is the author of Gay TV and Straight America (Rutgers University Press) and co-editor of Saturday Night Live and American TV (Indiana University Press). His work has also appeared in publications like The Craft of Criticism, The Television Studies Reader, How to Watch TV, Reading the Bromance, The Velvet Light Trap, Queer Studies in Media and Popular Culture, and Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television. Becker holds a Ph.D. in Media and Cultural Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Timothy Corrigan
Timothy Corrigan is a professor emeritus of cinema and media studies at the University of Pennsylvania. His other books include New German Film: The Displaced Image (Indiana UP); The Films of Werner Herzog: Between Mirage and History (Routledge); Writing about Film (Longman/Pearson); A Cinema without Walls: Movies and Culture after Vietnam (Routledge/Rutgers UP); Film and Literature: An Introduction and Reader (Routledge); Critical Visions in Film Theory: Classical and Contemporary Readings (Bedford/St. Martin’s), with Patricia White and Meta Mazaj; American Cinema of the 2000s (Rutgers UP); Essays on the Essay Film (Columbia UP), with Nora M. Alter; and The Essay Film: From Montaigne, After Marker (Oxford UP), winner of the 2012 Katherine Singer Kovács Award for the outstanding book in film and media studies. He has published essays in Film Quarterly, Discourse, and Cinema Journal, among other collections, and is also an editor of the journal Adaptation and a former editorial board member of Cinema Journal. In 2014, he received the Society for Cinema and Media Studies Award for Outstanding Pedagogical Achievement.
Patricia White
Patricia White is Professor and Chair of Film and Media Studies at Swarthmore College. She is the author of Women’s Cinema/World Cinema: Projecting Twenty-first Century Feminisms (Duke UP) and Uninvited: Classical Hollywood Cinema and Lesbian Representability (Indiana UP). Her essays have appeared in journals including Camera Obscura, Cinema Journal, Film Quarterly, and Screen, and in books including A Feminist Reader in Early Cinema, Out in Culture, and The Routledge Companion to Cinema and Gender. She is coeditor with Timothy Corrigan and Meta Mazaj of Critical Visions in Film Theory: Classic and Contemporary Readings (Bedford/St. Martin’s). She is a member of the editorial collective of the feminist film journal Camera Obscura. She serves on the board of the feminist distributor and media organization Women Make Movies and the editorial board of Film Quarterly.
Table of Contents
Richard Campbell
Richard Campbell is professor emeritus and founding chair of the Department of Media, Journalism, and Film at Miami University, as well as the 2019 recipient of the university’s Benjamin Harrison Medallion for his “Outstanding Contribution to the Education of the Nation.” Campbell is the author of “60 Minutes” and the News: A Mythology for Middle America (1991) and coauthor of Cracked Coverage: Television News, the Anti-Cocaine Crusade, and the Reagan Legacy (1994). He has written for numerous publications, including Columbia Journalism Review, Critical Studies in Mass Communication, and TV Quarterly. Campbell is cocreator of Stats+Stories, a long-running podcast sponsored by Miami University and the American Statistical Association, and winner of the 2021 Communication Award from the Mathematical Association of America. His other projects include the digital Oxford Observer newspaper and Report for Ohio, initiatives aimed at getting more young journalists real-world experience covering under-reported areas in rural and urban communities. He is executive producer of a 2019 documentary on the role that Oxford, Ohio, played in 1964’s Freedom Summer, titled Training for Freedom: How Ordinary People in an Unusual Time and Unlikely Place Made Extraordinary History. He served for ten years on the board of directors for Cincinnati Public Radio and holds a PhD from Northwestern University.
Christopher Martin
Christopher R. Martin is a professor of digital journalism and former department head of the Department of Communication and Media at the University of Northern Iowa. He is author of two award-winning books on labor and the media: No Longer Newsworthy: How the Mainstream Media Abandoned the Working Class and Framed! Labor and the Corporate Media, both with Cornell University Press. He has written articles, book chapters, and reviews on journalism, televised sports, the Internet, and labor for several publications, including Communication Research, Journal of Communication, Journal of Communication Inquiry, Labor Studies Journal, Culture, Sport, and Society, NiemanReports, and Perspectives on Politics. He is also on the editorial board of the Journal of Communication Inquiry. He is a contributing scholar to the Center for Journalism & Liberty and a regular contributor to Working-Class Perspectives. Martin holds a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan and has also taught at Miami University.
Bettina Fabos
Bettina Fabos is a professor of visual communication and interactive digital studies at the University of Northern Iowa. She is the executive producer of the interactive web photo history Proud and Torn: A Visual Memoir of Hungarian History (proudandtorn.org); the cofounder of a public digital archive of Iowa family snapshots, Fortepan Iowa (fortepan.us); and a champion of the Creative Commons. Fabos has also written extensively about critical media literacy, Internet commercialization, the role of the Internet in education, and media representations of popular culture. Her work has been published in Visual Communication Quarterly, Library Trends, Review of Educational Research, and Harvard Educational Review and she has received numerous awards for her creative work. Fabos has also taught at Miami University and has a Ph.D. from the University of Iowa.
Ron Becker
RON BECKER is a professor of media and communication and strategic communication at Miami University. He is the author of Gay TV and Straight America (Rutgers University Press) and co-editor of Saturday Night Live and American TV (Indiana University Press). His work has also appeared in publications like The Craft of Criticism, The Television Studies Reader, How to Watch TV, Reading the Bromance, The Velvet Light Trap, Queer Studies in Media and Popular Culture, and Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television. Becker holds a Ph.D. in Media and Cultural Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Timothy Corrigan
Timothy Corrigan is a professor emeritus of cinema and media studies at the University of Pennsylvania. His other books include New German Film: The Displaced Image (Indiana UP); The Films of Werner Herzog: Between Mirage and History (Routledge); Writing about Film (Longman/Pearson); A Cinema without Walls: Movies and Culture after Vietnam (Routledge/Rutgers UP); Film and Literature: An Introduction and Reader (Routledge); Critical Visions in Film Theory: Classical and Contemporary Readings (Bedford/St. Martin’s), with Patricia White and Meta Mazaj; American Cinema of the 2000s (Rutgers UP); Essays on the Essay Film (Columbia UP), with Nora M. Alter; and The Essay Film: From Montaigne, After Marker (Oxford UP), winner of the 2012 Katherine Singer Kovács Award for the outstanding book in film and media studies. He has published essays in Film Quarterly, Discourse, and Cinema Journal, among other collections, and is also an editor of the journal Adaptation and a former editorial board member of Cinema Journal. In 2014, he received the Society for Cinema and Media Studies Award for Outstanding Pedagogical Achievement.
Patricia White
Patricia White is Professor and Chair of Film and Media Studies at Swarthmore College. She is the author of Women’s Cinema/World Cinema: Projecting Twenty-first Century Feminisms (Duke UP) and Uninvited: Classical Hollywood Cinema and Lesbian Representability (Indiana UP). Her essays have appeared in journals including Camera Obscura, Cinema Journal, Film Quarterly, and Screen, and in books including A Feminist Reader in Early Cinema, Out in Culture, and The Routledge Companion to Cinema and Gender. She is coeditor with Timothy Corrigan and Meta Mazaj of Critical Visions in Film Theory: Classic and Contemporary Readings (Bedford/St. Martin’s). She is a member of the editorial collective of the feminist film journal Camera Obscura. She serves on the board of the feminist distributor and media organization Women Make Movies and the editorial board of Film Quarterly.
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