MEDIAtions: Text and Discourse in Media Studies (Hodder Arnold Publication)

MEDIAtions: Text and Discourse in Media Studies (Hodder Arnold Publication)

by Andrew Tolson (Author)

Synopsis

Offering a comprehensive introduction to media text analysis, this book covers a wide range of modern mass media, including television and radio, cinema, advertising, some forms of photography, popular fiction, women's magazines and other print media. Key concepts and methods of text analysis are explained and applied across this range of different media. The book summarizes previous work in these areas, but also offers new perspectives in the field of text analysis. It includes a detailed discussion of accessible examples.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Publisher: Hodder Education
Published: 01 Mar 1996

ISBN 10: 0340574895
ISBN 13: 9780340574898

Media Reviews
MEDIAtions provides a vibrant and timely resource for Media Studies in the 1990s. It demonstrates and applies central concepts and methods in the analysis of media texts and in so doing it highlights major questions concerning the relations between ourselves, the media and the 'imagined
communities' of modern cultural life. --Tim O'Sullivan, De Montfort University


MEDIAtions provides a vibrant and timely resource for Media Studies in the 1990s. It demonstrates and applies central concepts and methods in the analysis of media texts and in so doing it highlights major questions concerning the relations between ourselves, the media and the 'imagined
communities' of modern cultural life. --Tim O'Sullivan, De Montfort University

MEDIAtions provides a vibrant and timely resource for Media Studies in the 1990s. It demonstrates and applies central concepts and methods in the analysis of media texts and in so doing it highlights major questions concerning the relations between ourselves, the media and the 'imagined communities' of modern cultural life. --Tim O'Sullivan, De Montfort University


MEDIAtions provides a vibrant and timely resource for Media Studies in the 1990s. It demonstrates and applies central concepts and methods in the analysis of media texts and in so doing it highlights major questions concerning the relations between ourselves, the media and the 'imagined communities' of modern cultural life. --Tim O'Sullivan, De Montfort University