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Women in Mass Communication

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This landmark volume has been considerably expanded and updated in this new edition. With particular emphasis on race and culture, leading scholars in the field provide compelling analyses of the ways in which feminist theory and perspectives have been incorporated into mass communication. They examine the status of women in the mass communication industries, from sporadic breakthroughs to the continuing sexism and economic inequities that pervade the profession.

404 pages, Hardcover

First published August 1, 1989

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About the author

Pamela J. Creedon is Professor Emerita at the University of Iowa, who served as Acting Dean at Zayed University’s College of Communication and Media Sciences following her retirement. She started her 35-year academic career at The Ohio State University and began her administrative career as Director of the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Kent State University. Editor of the first three editions of Women in Mass Communication, she spent 15 years in the public relations profession before entering academe.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Clare O'Beara.
Author 25 books371 followers
January 6, 2020
This is a useful book with plenty of lines to quote in essays and more to make you think. Looks at women as presented in or working in media, advertising, health communication, education communication, semiotics, teen magazines, faith, global media, online, sports reporting (poor access to locker-rooms or sexual harassment and some vilification by male reporters) etc.
As this is an American book there are looks at how some of the minority race women are represented in the media.
Quotes include: "The glass ceiling is not glass after all; it consists of a very dense layer of white men." (Berkeley, 1999, p.105)

Many surveys and researches are quoted. Also many authors; references given at the end of each chapter.
P283 - 325 are references and author index. 329 - 335 subject index. The author index lists authors by first initial so I am unable to say how many women are cited.
Profile Image for Alessia.
54 reviews2 followers
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February 27, 2024
Note to self: read Chapters 4, 15 and 16 (could pick it up again for the other chapters eventually).
Interesting insights on the relationship between mass communication and social change as seen through a feminist lens. A morsel of thought to remember: there is a difference between women-produced media and feminist media; there is a very important difference between women's representation in media or women's employment in media industries and the potential for structural and ideological social change that women's presence in these contexts can give.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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