ABSTRACT

This up-to-date, accessible textbook presents a comprehensive overview of the history, present and future prospects of French media, and considers the successes and failures of the French media policy from 1945 to the present day.
Raymond Kuhn investigates the politics and economics of the press, radio and television, from the days of state intervention and monopoly provision to current trends towards deregulation and pluralism, and discusses the importance of the `new media' of cable and satellite broadcasting. Kuhn explores in particular the changing inter-relationship between media and state, as ownership and indirect interference decline while the state remains a key part of the media landscape in its policy making and regulatory roles.
The Media in France is essential reading for all students of French, European and Media Studies.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|33 pages

The press: History and economics

chapter 2|25 pages

The press: Politics

chapter 3|28 pages

Radio

chapter 4|26 pages

Television under de Gaulle

chapter 6|17 pages

Television: The end of the state monopoly

chapter 8|21 pages

The new media