A Handbook of Media and Communication Research presents qualitative as well as quantitative approaches to the study of media and communication, integrating perspectives from both the social sciences and the human...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

A Handbook of Media and Communication Research presents qualitative as well as quantitative approaches to the study of media and communication, integrating perspectives from both the social sciences and the humanities. Taking methodology as a strategic level of analysis that joins practical concerns with theoretical issues, the Handbook offers a comprehensive and in-depth review of the field and a set of guidelines for how to think about, plan, and carry out media and communication studies in different social and cultural contexts.

The second edition has been thoroughly updated with reference to the development of the internet, mobile, and other digital media.

  • Each chapter addresses shifting configurations of established media organizations, media discourses, and media users in networked practices of communication.
  • The introduction and one further chapter probe changing conceptions on mass and interpersonal, online and offline communication – in research as in everyday life.
  • Three new chapters have been added to exemplify different forms of research employing multiple methods to study multiple media in multiple contexts.

List of contributors: Klaus Bruhn Jensen, Barrie Gunter, Rasmus Helles, Annette Hill, Stig Hjarvard, Peter Larsen, Amanda Lotz, Graham Murdock, Horace Newcomb, Paddy Scannell, Lynn Schofield Clark, Kim Christian Schrøder



Similar Products

How to Do Media and Cultural StudiesMothering through Precarity: Women's Work and Digital MediaQuestioning Numbers: How to Read and Critique ResearchThe Television Will Be Revolutionized, Second EditionShow Sold Separately: Promos, Spoilers, and Other Media ParatextsA Word from Our Sponsor: Admen, Advertising, and the Golden Age of RadioSelling Digital Music, Formatting CultureTelevision: Technology and Cultural Form (Routledge Classics) (Volume 124)The Right to Look: A Counterhistory of VisualityCaptive Audience: The Telecom Industry and Monopoly Power in the New Gilded Age