ABSTRACT

From TV to smartphone apps to movies to newspapers, mass media are nearly omnipresent in contemporary life and act as a powerful social institution. In this introduction to media sociology, Lindner and Barnard encourage readers to think critically about the power of big media companies, state-media relations, new developments in journalism, representations of race, class, gender, and sexuality in media, and what social media may or may not be doing to our brains, among other topics. Each chapter explores pressing questions about media by carefully excavating the results of classic and contemporary social scientific studies. The authors bring these findings to life with anecdotes and examples ripped from headlines and social media newsfeeds. By synthesizing research on new media and traditional media, entertainment media and news, quantitative and qualitative studies, All Media Are Social offers a succinct and accessibly-written analysis of both enduring patterns and some of the newest developments in mass media. With strong emphases on theory and methods, Lindner and Barnard provide students and general readers alike with the tools to better understand the ever-changing media landscape.

part Section 1|25 pages

Overview

chapter 1|8 pages

All Media Are Social

chapter 2|15 pages

Theorizing the Media

part Section 2|63 pages

Production

chapter 3|14 pages

Who Pays for It?

chapter 4|18 pages

In the Hands of a Few

chapter 5|15 pages

Big Brother Knows You’re Watching

chapter 6|14 pages

The Makers and the Breakers

part Section 3|51 pages

Content

chapter 7|20 pages

Fear and Loathing onCable News

chapter 8|13 pages

Doing Gender and Sexuality in Media

chapter 9|16 pages

Unequal Images in an Unequal Age

part Section 4|35 pages

Audiences

chapter 10|13 pages

Are We Robots?

chapter 11|20 pages

Or Are We Rebels?