Description

Book Synopsis
Exploring key areas relating to media, power and cultural identity, this study looks at the effects of the media in Ireland, first radio, then television, and now the newer media.

Trade Review
"TV is so ubiquitous in the west that we forget it has any effect on people - yet it is there, quietly forming and reflecting our opinions. So too with radio and film... Here, a series of articles have been gathered to look at the Irish experience: The North; Glenroe's treatment of such topics as travelling people and the unemployed...talk radio; broadcasting in Irish... Anyone working in the media has to read this." Lucille Redmond RTE Guide Nov. 1997 "this volume, much of whose contents are published for the first time, is a welcome and timely addition to the critical literature concerning the roles of media in contemporary Ireland." Media, Culture and Society 21 (1) 1999 "The chapters in this book constitute a valuable contribution to our understanding of how meaning is constructed by media audiences." Bill Rolston, University of Ulster Irish Journal of Sociology vol 8 1998 "Media Audiences in Ireland provides useful, audience-empowering insights for both students and professionals studying and working within all aspects of culture and communication - a good, practical set-text for university courses relating to the media." Jayne Steel. Lancaster University Irish Studies Review 7 (3) 1999

Table of Contents
Participatory media and audience response, Mary J. Kelly; the arts show audience, Brian O'Neill; gender, class and television viewing, Barbara O'Connor; the female audience and the pleasures of the cinema, Helen Byrne; a study of community relations broadcasting in Northern Ireland, Paul Nolan; dominant ideologies and media power, the case of Northern Ireland, David Miller; Northern Ireland audiences and television news, David Miller; talk radio and the public sphere, Sara O'Sullivan; divorce referendum coverage; a history of Irish language broadcasting, Iarfhlaith Watson; "Glenroe", its audience and the coverage of social problems, Eoin Devereux; children and television pleasure, Margaret Gunning.

Media Audiences in Ireland: Power and Cultural

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A Paperback / softback by Mary Kelly, Barbara O¿Connor

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    View other formats and editions of Media Audiences in Ireland: Power and Cultural by Mary Kelly

    Publisher: University College Dublin Press
    Publication Date: 19/09/1997
    ISBN13: 9781900621090, 978-1900621090
    ISBN10: 1900621096

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Exploring key areas relating to media, power and cultural identity, this study looks at the effects of the media in Ireland, first radio, then television, and now the newer media.

    Trade Review
    "TV is so ubiquitous in the west that we forget it has any effect on people - yet it is there, quietly forming and reflecting our opinions. So too with radio and film... Here, a series of articles have been gathered to look at the Irish experience: The North; Glenroe's treatment of such topics as travelling people and the unemployed...talk radio; broadcasting in Irish... Anyone working in the media has to read this." Lucille Redmond RTE Guide Nov. 1997 "this volume, much of whose contents are published for the first time, is a welcome and timely addition to the critical literature concerning the roles of media in contemporary Ireland." Media, Culture and Society 21 (1) 1999 "The chapters in this book constitute a valuable contribution to our understanding of how meaning is constructed by media audiences." Bill Rolston, University of Ulster Irish Journal of Sociology vol 8 1998 "Media Audiences in Ireland provides useful, audience-empowering insights for both students and professionals studying and working within all aspects of culture and communication - a good, practical set-text for university courses relating to the media." Jayne Steel. Lancaster University Irish Studies Review 7 (3) 1999

    Table of Contents
    Participatory media and audience response, Mary J. Kelly; the arts show audience, Brian O'Neill; gender, class and television viewing, Barbara O'Connor; the female audience and the pleasures of the cinema, Helen Byrne; a study of community relations broadcasting in Northern Ireland, Paul Nolan; dominant ideologies and media power, the case of Northern Ireland, David Miller; Northern Ireland audiences and television news, David Miller; talk radio and the public sphere, Sara O'Sullivan; divorce referendum coverage; a history of Irish language broadcasting, Iarfhlaith Watson; "Glenroe", its audience and the coverage of social problems, Eoin Devereux; children and television pleasure, Margaret Gunning.

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